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FieldAI builds foundational AI models that help all kinds of robots learn and adapt to new environments using physics.
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Tech Xplore on MSNWith human feedback, AI-driven robots learn tasks better and faster
At UC Berkeley, researchers in Sergey Levine's Robotic AI and Learning Lab eyed a table where a tower of 39 Jenga blocks ...
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Tech Xplore on MSNRobots can now learn to use tools—just by watching us
Despite decades of progress, most robots are still programmed for specific, repetitive tasks. They struggle with the unexpected and can't adapt to new situations without painstaking reprogramming. But ...
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Robots learn how to move by watching themselves
The researchers detailed their findings in the journal Nature Machine Intelligence. "Like humans learning to dance by watching their mirror reflection, robots now use raw video to build kinematic ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNRobots learn to prioritize human safety with smarter decision-making system
The new algorithm could help robots make safer, smarter decisions around humans, even amidst the greatest uncertainties.
By observing their own motions, robots can learn how to overcome damage to their bodies, which could make them more adaptable for a wide variety of applications.
Purdue professor programs robots and AI to navigate the physical world more easily — partly by teaching robots to dance.
South Burlington and Champlain Valley Union High School students advertise international program that connects kids with ...
These eerie, self-aware robots can use AI to watch themselves in the mirror, allowing them to learn the same way that humans do.
Robotic arms have a lot in common with CNC machines in that they are usually driven by a fixed script of specific positions ...
Sergey Levine is an assistant professor at UC Berkeley whose research is focused on the thing our parents used to make such a fuss over, whenever we made stupid mistakes or should have known to ...
Scientists presented this advancement at the recently held Conference on Robot Learning in Munich. Beginning with PUMA 560 in 1985, robots have been helping surgeons perform surgical procedures.
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