NewsArticlesAnnouncementAbout UsContacts
About us Contact

We are guided by what unites people

News
Articles
Announcement
About Us
Contacts

Copyright 2017-2026 ORIENT - NEWS AGENCY

About us | Contact |

Sixth Sense for Robots: Engineers Will Teach Machines Remote Touch

November 24, 2025 | 14:00 |5397
Researchers from Queen Mary University of London and University College London are developing a new interdisciplinary framework to equip robots with an analogue of a “sixth sense.”Researchers from Queen Mary University of London and University College London are developing a new interdisciplinary framework to equip robots with an analogue of a “sixth sense.”
Source: techcult.ru

Researchers from Queen Mary University of London and University College London are developing a new interdisciplinary framework to equip robots with an analogue of a “sixth sense.” The goal of the project is to give machines the ability of remote touch — allowing them to detect hidden objects without direct contact by sensing subtle changes in the surrounding environment.

This research lies at the intersection of physiology, psychology, artificial intelligence, and robotics. This skill is well developed in some birds (for example, waders that locate worms by sensing movements of sand grains), but it is scarcely used by humans.

Experiments confirmed that humans possess better remote-touch abilities than existing robots. People can locate buried objects at a depth of up to 2.7 cm (maximum — 6.9 cm) with a success rate of about 70%, while robots equipped with similar sensors currently achieve no more than 40%.

The main task for engineers is not only to improve the sensors but also to understand the mechanisms of data processing in order to replicate the unique human perception.

The development of remote touch will give robots important practical skills: it will be useful for delicate handling of various materials, as well as for searching for hidden objects in archaeology, during search-and-rescue operations, or when working with extraterrestrial soil (such as on Mars). Such sensors will also be valuable in hazardous environments where direct contact with dangerous substances should be avoided.

ORIENT

Also read:

Youth Robotics Competition: Winners Announced

More news

tmcell
TNGIZD
toyota banner
orient mobil gosyndy
orient mobile ios
Bilelik HUB
Uzbeks Are Selling More Foreign Currency to Banks

Uzbeks Are Selling More Foreign Currency to Banks

23:40 June 25, 2026
Dina Zaripova Will Represent Tatarstan at the “Tatar Kyzy” Competition in Turkmenistan

Dina Zaripova Will Represent Tatarstan at the “Tatar Kyzy” Competition in Turkmenistan

23:30 June 25, 2026
Uzbek Folk Dance Enters the Guinness World Records

Uzbek Folk Dance Enters the Guinness World Records

23:30 June 25, 2026