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German Bionic claims Exia is the world’s first exoskeleton powered by augmented AI, a type of artificial intelligence ...
Haptikos has unveiled a hand exoskeleton, meant to let you to use your hands with precision in haptic applications. It works with extended reality (XR) devices. Based in Sunnyvale, California ...
Researcher Shinichi Furuya and his team at Sony Computer Science Laboratories in Tokyo, discovered that a therapeutic robotic hand exoskeleton that helps people who have lost or have limited use ...
German Bionic announced today that it launched the Exia AI-powered exoskeleton system, its most advanced wearable to date.
Exia learns from user movements and improves its assistance over time, making it useful for multiple industries, says German Bionic.
The hand exoskeleton is a rare example of this kind of device being used to improve ability in a group of people who are non-disabled. Often, exoskeletons are used in rehabilitation, for instance ...
Fast and complex multi-finger movements generated by the hand exoskeleton. Credit: Shinichi Furuya When it comes to fine-tuned motor skills like playing the piano, practice, they say, makes perfect.
A robotic hand exoskeleton can help expert pianists learn to play even faster by moving their fingers for them. Robotic exoskeletons have long been used to rehabilitate people who can no longer ...
However, one-sided paralysis following a stroke usually affects not only the hand, but the entire side ... consisting of an exoskeleton for the arm and shoulder in combination with FES as part ...
But what if all it takes to break the plateau is a helping hand? Researchers in Japan have devised a robotic exoskeleton that can move a pianist’s fingers and play notes for them. Developed by ...
The Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur (IITK) said on Saturday it has developed a unique brain-computer interface-based robotic hand exoskeleton that can help in stroke rehabilitation and ...
It's called Magnus, and it's an electromagnetic hand exoskeleton that moves your fingers at blisteringly fast speeds. The project is a collaboration between teams at Sony Computer Science ...