Robotics, Automation & Control

Robotics

Access extensive multimedia resources and technical briefs on robotic systems. Browse the latest developments and applications for design engineers working in industrial manufacturing and medical industries.

Stories

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Briefs: Sensors/Data Acquisition
Researchers from Duke University have developed a novel framework named WildFusion that fuses vision, vibration, and touch to enable robots to “sense” complex outdoor environments much like humans do. Read on to learn more.
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Briefs: Sensors/Data Acquisition
A human clearing junk out of an attic can often guess the contents of a box simply by picking it up and giving it a shake, without the need to see what’s inside. Researchers from MIT, Amazon Robotics, and the University of British Columbia have taught robots to do something similar. Read on to learn more.
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Briefs: Manufacturing & Prototyping
Imagine a robot that can walk, without electronics, and only with the addition of a cartridge of compressed gas, right off the 3D printer. It can also be printed in one go, from one material. That is exactly what roboticists have achieved in robots developed by the Bioinspired Robotics Laboratory at the University of California San Diego. Read on to learn more.
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Briefs: Motion Control
Researchers have created a light-powered soft robot that can carry loads through the air along established tracks, similar to cable cars or aerial trams. The soft robot operates autonomously, can climb slopes at angles of up to 80°, and can carry loads up to 12 times its weight. Read on to learn more.
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Briefs: Software
Researchers from MIT and NVIDIA Research have developed a novel algorithm that dramatically speeds up a robot’s planning process. Their approach enables a robot to “think ahead” by evaluating thousands of possible solutions in parallel and then refining the best ones to meet the constraints of the robot and its environment. Read on to learn more.
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Briefs: Robotics, Automation & Control
Specialized robots that can both fly and drive typically touch down on land before attempting to transform and drive away. But when the landing terrain is rough, these robots sometimes get stuck and are unable to continue operating. Now a team of Caltech engineers has developed a real-life Transformer that has the “brains” to morph in midair, allowing the dronelike robot to smoothly roll away and begin its ground operations without pause. Read on to learn more.
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White Papers: Motion Control
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6 Reasons You Should & 2 Reasons You Shouldn't Use a FLUX Inductive Rotary Encoder
Motion control systems operate in the real world, not in ideal lab conditions. FLUX Inductive Encoders deliver reliable, high-resolution position sensing even in...

Blog: Design
Scientists have developed a low-cost, durable, highly-sensitive robotic ‘skin’ that can be added to robotic hands like a glove, enabling robots to detect information about their surroundings in a way that’s similar to humans.
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INSIDER: Sensors/Data Acquisition
In the midst of the co-development of artificial intelligence and robotic advancements, developing technologies that enable robots to efficiently perceive and respond to their surroundings like humans has...
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INSIDER: Motion Control
Unlike human manufacturing, the grand designs of bees, ants, and termites emerge simply from their collective action with no central planning required. Now, researchers at Penn’s School of...
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INSIDER: Sensors/Data Acquisition
When ChatGPT or Gemini give what seems to be an expert response to your burning questions, you may not realize how much information it relies on to give that reply. Like...
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INSIDER: Materials
Researchers have created dynamic structures that leap into the air on a predetermined schedule without intervention from computers or external stimuli. Precisely when these...
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Podcasts: Robotics, Automation & Control
Advances in autonomous surgical robotic systems.
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White Papers: Robotics, Automation & Control
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The Next Wave of Machine Vision Interfaces — Thunderbolt, RocEv2, and Embedded
One of the biggest game changers for machine vision has been the introduction and standardization of interfaces. In the earlier years of this century GigE Vision...

Podcasts: Robotics, Automation & Control
Socially assistive robotics are playing an increasingly powerful role in eldercare and patient rehabilitation.
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Blog: RF & Microwave Electronics
The team has developed the Safety-Assured High-Speed Aerial Robot (SUPER), capable of flying at speeds exceeding 20 meters per second [about 45 miles per hour] and avoiding obstacles as thin as 2.5 millimeters [about 0.1 inch] — such as power lines or twigs — using solely onboard sensors and computing power.
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Blog: Aerospace
A CU Boulder team is using digital twins — hyper-realistic VR environments — to provide a useful proxy for the moon, giving people a chance to get the hang of driving robots without risking damage to multi-million-dollar equipment.
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INSIDER: Robotics, Automation & Control
Medical crash carts — stocked with medications, syringes, gauze, and IV fluids — are essential tools in emergency rooms, where seconds matter, space is tight, and confusion can cost lives. However,...
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INSIDER: Software
Ready for that long-awaited summer vacation? First, you’ll need to pack all items required for your trip into a suitcase, making sure everything fits securely without...
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INSIDER: Robotics, Automation & Control
Over the past decade, robots have become an increasingly important part of our daily lives. Autonomous vehicles shuttle us from point A to point B, drones deliver lifesaving medicine to remote towns, sidewalk...
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INSIDER: Defense
A new imaging technique developed by MIT researchers could enable quality-control robots in a warehouse to peer through a cardboard shipping box and see that the handle of a...
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Podcasts: Medical
A look at transformative advancement in surgical robotics, where robots can perform with both mechanical precision and human-like adaptability and understanding.
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Technology & Society: Design
An assistive robotic device can provide at-home therapy and also enable independence on everyday tasks.
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Blog: Robotics, Automation & Control
Equine-Assisted Interventions (EAIs) offer a powerful alternative to traditional talking therapies for patients with PTSD, trauma, and autism who struggle to express and regulate emotions through words alone.
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Blog: Physical Sciences
The new robot, dubbed ATMO (aerially transforming morphobot), uses four thrusters to fly, but the shrouds that protect them become the system's wheels in an alternative driving configuration. The whole transformation relies on a single motor to move a central joint that lifts ATMO's thrusters up into drone mode or down into drive mode.
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Special Reports: Manufacturing & Prototyping
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Robotics & Motion Control - June 2025
Once a staple of science fiction, humanoid robots are rapidly becoming a reality. Our executive panel weighs in. Get their insights in this compendium of articles from the editors of Tech Briefs and...

Blog: Wearables
A University of Nebraska–Lincoln engineering team is another step closer to developing soft robotics and wearable systems that mimic the ability of human and plant skin to detect and self-heal injuries.
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INSIDER: Motion Control
Specialized robots that can both fly and drive typically touch down on land before attempting to transform and drive away. But when the landing terrain is rough,...
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INSIDER: Sensors/Data Acquisition
Analog computing is making a comeback with hardware that processes and stores information in the same location, similar to biological...
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Videos