News

MIT professor Daniela Rus explains how AI-powered robots are being trained to safely assist in homes and daily life.
The robotic arm is adapted from the MIT Humanoid project—a bipedal robot that can run, jump, and even flip. Each arm has four joints controlled by electric motors.
MIT professor Daniela Rus explains how AI-powered robots are being trained to safely assist in homes and daily life.
According to researchers, cuTAMP is robot-agnostic and has been successfully tested on a robotic arm at MIT and a humanoid robot at NVIDIA.
The tech giant’s latest robotics offering is Jetson Thor, a super computer built for real-time AI computation on humanoid ...
With robots increasingly being used on manufacturing floors, researchers are looking for ways that humans can work better with their robot coworkers. Scientists at MIT say the answer is cross ...
With robots increasingly being used on factory floors and elsewhere, researchers are looking for ways to help humans work better with their electromechanical counterparts. Scientists at MIT say ...
MIT's humanoid robot is going to compete in DARPA's Robotics Challenge finals in two weeks. But can it walk on its own two feet?
MIT's Daniela Rus isn’t worried that robots will take over the world. Instead, she envisions robots and humans teaming up to achieve things that neither could do alone.
Engineers at MIT have programmed a robot arm that's able to help people with disabilities or limited mobility safely put on their clothes.