Researchers have created a single-material electronic skin using a gelatin-based conductive hydrogel that senses pressure, heat, and damage. 32 electrodes in the hand collected over 1.7M data points to enable a ML model to interpret various touches.

Jun 23, 2025 · 7:23 PM UTC

Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
humans aint ready to disocver dey are just quantic-equations and gelatin-blood sacks
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Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
Sensing the future of touch technology.
Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
Remember the self-healing coating of some 1990s portable electronics degenerating into a oily goo after 5 years.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/a…
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Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
One step closer to autonomous humanoid robots. Integrating the physical being with the LLM will be the next challenge
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Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
It isn't low cost as they are hiding the fact that it is computationally intensive and that has associated costs too.
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Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
A single gelatin sheet that feels pressure, heat and its own injuries—goodbye fragile sensor mosaics, hello print-and-go e-skin for prosthetics and soft robots. ✋⚡️
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Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
Thing is far better then plastic junk, it should use prebuilt neuromorphic architecture so it can follow principal of organics
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Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
Skin is the new frontier
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Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
So funny I just had this idea in a totally different geometry.
Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
That’s wild
Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
Structure gel is harmless to humans in small doses but large doses cause nausea and possibly a state of coma, there is no treatment for over-exposure. All of the structure gel in PATHOS-II was linked to the WAU, which gave the A.I. complete control of any machine or structure infused with the gel.
Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
Imagine interactive art at Dubai's Museum of the Future with this sensitive skin tech! Digital canvases that feel 😻
Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
Financially feasible?
Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
@AskPerplexity generate image cute comic like style, news headline relationship with videogames and simulation hypothesis
Replying to @TheHumanoidHub
Not sure we want biodegradable robotics actually
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