Innovation Toronto Innovation Toronto

.

Everything starts with an idea . . .

  • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
  • List of Institutions
  • Institution Updates
  • 1MM to 3MM Visitors
    • 2MM to 3MM Visitors
    • 1MM to 2MM Visits
  • 100k to 1MM Visitors
    • 500k to 1MM Visitors
    • 300k to 500k Visitors
    • 200k to 300k Visits
    • 100k to 200k Visits
  • Up to 100k Visitors
    • 50k to 100k Visits
    • 25K to 50K Visits
    • 10k to 25k Visits
    • Under 10k Visits
Menu
  • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
  • List of Institutions
  • Institution Updates
  • 1MM to 3MM Visitors
    • 2MM to 3MM Visitors
    • 1MM to 2MM Visits
  • 100k to 1MM Visitors
    • 500k to 1MM Visitors
    • 300k to 500k Visitors
    • 200k to 300k Visits
    • 100k to 200k Visits
  • Up to 100k Visitors
    • 50k to 100k Visits
    • 25K to 50K Visits
    • 10k to 25k Visits
    • Under 10k Visits
loading...
The Latest
  • AI clones made from user data pose uncanny risks
  • Is AI capable of predicting someone’s emotional response to events before they occur – today?
  • A smart sensor ring for health care and extended reality
  • Could Greenlandic glacial rock flour really help to stop climate change?
  • Opening the door to a novel solution to prevent infectious diseases
  • The ability to separate rare earth elements efficiently using bacterial protein
  • New adaptive algorithms as well as intuitive AI methods for adjusting personal sound exactly to your taste
  • The idea of an actual space tractor beam to help deal with space debris moves closer
  • A wound-healing ink that can actively encourage the body to heal completely repaired wounds in just 12 days
  • Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications
Home electronic skin

Auditory electronic skin can hear better than ears alone

Auditory electronic skin can hear better than ears alone

Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

An electronic skin which can learn from feeling ‘pain’

An electronic skin which can learn from feeling ‘pain’

Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

Could robots sense injury with the help of bruisable artificial skin?

Could robots sense injury with the help of bruisable artificial skin?

Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

A new type of energy-generating synthetic skin is capable of mimicking the sense of touch

A new type of energy-generating synthetic skin is capable of mimicking the sense of touch

Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

Electronic skin that can detect movement and temperature together

Electronic skin that can detect movement and temperature together

Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

A cheap and recyclable alternative to wearable devices: Electronic skin that can perform many different functions

A cheap and recyclable alternative to wearable devices: Electronic skin that can perform many different functions

Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

Elastic membrane patches that mimic the human skin either in looks, functionality, or both get ready for their closeup

Elastic membrane patches that mimic the human skin either in looks, functionality, or both get ready for their closeup

Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

Researchers have developed electronic artificial skin that reacts to pain just like real skin

Researchers have developed electronic artificial skin that reacts to pain just like real skin

Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

A new electronic skin human-machine interface is powered by sweat

A new electronic skin human-machine interface is powered by sweat

Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

Electronic skin gets integrated micro chips

Electronic skin gets integrated micro chips

Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

A better interface between humans and machines?

A better interface between humans and machines?

International research team develops bimodal “electronic skin” Through the crafty use of magnetic fields, scientists from the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR) and the Johannes Kep... Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

Electronic skin technology for robots or electronic devices could feel pain through sense of touch

Electronic skin technology for robots or electronic devices could feel pain through sense of touch

Professor Jae Eun Jang’s team developed electronic skin technology for robots or electronic devices to feel pain through sense of touch.  Expected to be applied in humanoid that needs 5 huma... Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

An artificial nervous system can detect touches more than 1,000 times faster than the human sensory nervous system

An artificial nervous system can detect touches more than 1,000 times faster than the human sensory nervous system

Robots and prosthetic devices may soon have a sense of touch equivalent to, or better than, the human skin with the Asynchronous Coded Electronic Skin (ACES), an artificial nervous system de... Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

Harvesting body heat to power synthetic skins

Harvesting body heat to power synthetic skins

Researchers at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science lead the way in utilising thermoelectric generators as a potential power supply for synthetic skins A team led by Pro... Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share

Electronic robotic skin grows closer

Electronic robotic skin grows closer

Robots will be able to conduct a wide variety of tasks as well as humans if they can be given tactile sensing capabilities. A KAIST research team has reported a stretchable pressure insensit... Read more

Share 0
Tweet
Share
Share
12

Most Visited Today

Most Visited This Week

Most Visited This Month

Featured Today . . .

AI clones made from user data pose uncanny risks

Read More
on 05 June 2023

Is AI capable of predicting someone’s emotional response to events before they occur – today?

Read More
on 05 June 2023

A smart sensor ring for health care and extended reality

Read More
on 04 June 2023

Fraunhofer Society

Read More
on 18 May 2019
load more
The Latest University & Research Institutions Updated . . .

McGovern Institute for Brain Research

University of Toronto

RWTH Aachen University

MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL)

load more

Copyright 2023. Created by Innovation Toronto

Desktop Version Mobile Version