January 31, 2005

Korean scientists unveil robotic skin

Posted by ryan at 05:54 PM in robots , technology . | 1 Comments

Yoon Eui-sik, at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), has developed a tactile sensor that would give robots a sense of touch similar to humans.

The sensor is made of a lattice of copper electrodes placed on a film of synthetic rubber that feels like human skin.

The sensor can recognise stimuli from a distance of one millimeter and identify the exact shape of letters when they placed a lettered stamp on it.

The team's goal is to develop a perfect tactile sensor that can perceive temperature and forces operating horizontally.

Last year Tokyo engineers unveiled a tactile sensor , but it could only recognize stimuli 2 millimeters away from the sensor, and since it was made of plastic lacked the softness of human skin.

Via Digital Chosun.


 

Comments

There's something about this post title. Every time I see it, I think it says, "Karen insists on evil robotic skin."

My subconcious must be trying to tell me something.

Posted by: karen at February 1, 2005 2:52 PM