Credit: Ganguly Lab/UCSF/Noah Berger/Cover Images Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, have enabled a paralysed man to regularly control a robotic arm using signals from his ...
He was able to grasp, move, and release objects simply by imagining himself performing the actions. The device, known as a brain-computer interface (BCI), functioned successfully for a record seven ...
What if the future of industrial automation could fit in the palm of your hand? Imagine a robot arm so compact it could rest on your desk, yet so precise it operates with sub-micrometer accuracy, a ...