electronic skin
Schematic diagram of polymer-based skin-attachable acoustic sensor. Attached on the skin. Comparative graph of sound
via University of Glasgow An electronic skin which can learn from feeling ‘pain’ An electronic
An artificial skin attached to a person's knee develops a purple "bruise" when hit forcefully
via Phys.org A new type of energy-generating synthetic skin is capable of mimicking the sense
Electronic skin that can detect movement and temperature together – POSTECH-Stanford joint research team develops
A user fits an "electronic skin" device onto the wrist. (Credit: Chuanqian Shi) A cheap
Researchers in Europe are working on elastic membrane patches that mimic how the skin looks
A concept image of electronic skin that can sense touch, pain, and heat. CREDIT: Ella
Credit: Wei Gao Photo of Biofuel Cell Powered E-Skin A new electronic skin human-machine interface
Flexible electronic skin equipped with an array of giant magneto resistance sensors and complex electronics
International research team develops bimodal “electronic skin” Through the crafty use of magnetic fields, scientists
Professor Jae Eun Jang’s team developed electronic skin technology for robots or electronic devices to
Robots and prosthetic devices may soon have a sense of touch equivalent to, or better
Researchers at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science lead the way in utilising
Robots will be able to conduct a wide variety of tasks as well as humans