Scientists burned, poked and sliced their way through new robotic skin that can 'feel everything' - New, gelatin-based material could let robots feel everything from a light poke to a deep cut.

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Scientists have developed a new type of electronic "skin" that could give robots the ability to "feel" different tactile sensations like pokes, prods and temperature changes — and even the feeling of being stabbed.


The skin is made from an electrically conductive, gelatin-based material that can be molded into different shapes. When equipped with a special type of electrode, the material can detect signals from hundreds of thousands of connective pathways that correspond to different touch and pressure sensations.

The scientists said the material could be used in humanoid robots or human prosthetics where a sense of touch is vital, in addition to having broader applications in the automotive sector and in disaster relief. They published their findings June 11 in the journal Science Robotics.

Tactile sensing has emerged as the next big milestone for robotics, as scientists look to build machines that can respond to the world in a manner akin to human sensitivity.


Electronic skins typically work by converting physical information — like pressure or temperature — into electronic signals. In most cases, different types of sensors are needed for different types of sensation; for example, one to detect pressure, another to detect temperature and so on.

However, signals from these different sensors can interfere with each other, and the materials they are embedded in — traditionally soft silicones or stretchy, rubber-like materials called elastomers — are easily damaged, the scientists said.

This new electronic skin uses a single type of "multi-modal" sensor that is capable of detecting different types of stimuli like touch, temperature and damage.

While it's still challenging to reliably separate and pinpoint the cause of each signal, multi-modal sensing materials are easier to fabricate and more robust, the scientists said. They're also less expensive to produce, making them suitable and cost-effective for widespread use.

That's handy​

To test their synthetic flesh, the researchers melted down a soft, stretchy and electrically conductive gelatin-based hydrogel, and cast it into the shape of a human hand. They then equipped the hand with different electrode configurations to see which captured the most useful data from physical interactions, subjecting it to a series of tests to find out.

This rather brutal process involved blasting it with a heat gun, poking it with their fingers and a robotic arm, and cutting it open with a scalpel.

In total, the researchers said they collected more than 1.7 million pieces of information from the skin's 860,000-plus conductive pathways. They used data gathered from these tests to train a machine learning model that, if integrated into a robotic system, could enable it to recognize different types of touch.

"We're not quite at the level where the robotic skin is as good as human skin, but we think it’s better than anything else out there at the moment," study co-author Thomas George Thuruthel, a lecturer in robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) at University College London (UCL), said in a statement.

"Our method is flexible and easier to build than traditional sensors, and we're able to calibrate it using human touch for a range of tasks."
 
Obvious sex robot implications aside, this is actually pretty cool. Having a super sensitive, multi mode sensor embedded in something like gelatin would be pretty neat to play around with. I bet you could make a really good thermostat with one of those that would respond a lot closer to the way humans experience temperature than current sensors do.
 
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They will.
 
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What’s the point of this? Are they just trying to make a sexbot?
 
What’s the point of this? Are they just trying to make a sexbot?
Nah, its more that its super useful for any robot that needs to grasp or interact with things. Being able to sense pressure as opposed to touch/no-touch means you can tell when your gripping something strongly, and also means you can tell when you're gripping it too hard and it starts to crush/collapse.

I suppose that applies to dicks too, but a huge amount of labor is just various forms of picking things up, moving them elsewhere, and putting them back down. Its also useful in locomotion, as varied pressure across an artificial foot provides a potential indicator of balance, in a preemptive form before you start toppling over. Same goes for walking into anything, if you can detect the pressure of the hit immediately, before you bounce off it, you can immediately start correcting the likely fall path and maybe just stumble instead of eating shit. Being a flexible, cheap silicon means its processing power that limits how much of the robot you could cover, not cost or geometry.
 
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