Lewis Smith
September 09, 2006
A TOUCH sensor developed to match the sensitivity of the human finger is set to herald the age of the robotic doctor. Until now robots have been severely handicapped by their inability to feel with anything like the accuracy of their human creators.
The very best are unable to beat the dexterity of a six-year-old at knotting shoelaces or building a house of cards.
But all that could change with the development by nanotechnologists of a device that can "feel" the shape of a coin, down to the detail of the letters stamped on it.
The ability to feel with at least the same degree of sensitivity as a finger is crucial to the development of robots that can take on complicated tasks such as open heart surgery.
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