Skip to main content

Camera-clad rubber fingertips allow robots to manipulate cables and wires

Robots that can Manipulate Cables

Tying a knot or plugging a charger into a port are tasks that require human-like dexterity, but thanks to research out of MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), robots could soon be up to the task.

By embedding sensors created using rubber and cameras, the team was able to create a bot capable of working with rope, cord, and wires in a more human-like manner.

Each of the robot arm’s two fingers is equipped with sensors called GelSight. These sensors use tiny cameras embedded in soft rubber. The cameras allow the robot to understand where the cable is, its size and shape, and the force as the cable slides through two fingers.

MIT CSAIL

Understanding the cable’s physical properties and location is just one part of the equation. Next, the researchers built a framework allowing the robot to use that information to adjust movements in real-time in order to quickly work with that cable. The researchers developed a controller to regulate grip strength and a second to adjust the gripper’s position.

When put to the test, the robotic arm was able to successfully plug a pair of earbuds into a headphone jack, as well as working with thinner and thicker ropes, wires, and cables. While that may bring to mind a robot butler capable of plugging itself in at night, the technology is most likely destined to start in the automotive industry, though the researchers note the potential for the technology to one day be used in surgical sutures, industrial applications, and potential household uses.

MIT CSAIL

“Manipulating soft objects is so common in our daily lives, like cable manipulation, cloth folding, and string knotting,” Yu She, MIT postdoctoral associate and lead author, said. “In many cases, we would like to have robots help humans do this kind of work, especially when the tasks are repetitive, dull, or unsafe.”

GelSight builds on research published last month that embedded cameras into a robot gripper to pick up objects as delicate as a potato chip. The new technology allows for cable manipulation with fewer drops, longer distances, and more accuracy than previous robotics, the team says. The group plans to research additional tasks like routing cables, as well as real-world uses such as automatically manipulating cables within the automotive industry.

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
New ‘shady’ research from MIT uses shadows to see what cameras can’t
mit csail blind inverse light

Computational Mirrors: Revealing Hidden Video

Artificial intelligence could soon help video cameras see lies just beyond what the lens can see -- by using shadows. Researchers at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) have concocted an algorithm that “sees” what’s out of the video frame by analyzing the shadows and shading that out-of-view objects create. The research, Blind Inverse Light Transport by Deep Matrix Factorization, was published today, Dec. 6.

Read more
These new chips could be good news for Copilot+ PCs
The Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus

The first Copilot+ laptops are already out, powered by Qualcomm's impressive new Snapdragon X chip. The first batch of reviews were delayed, and early impressions have observed the hits and misses of the current chips. But a new leak tells us that Qualcomm might have another ace up its sleeve, and there may be hope for these Arm-based Copilot+ PCs yet. What's new? There might be more models of the chip than what we've been privy to so far.

So far, we've seen reviews of the Asus Vivobook S 15, but that's just one of several chips that fall under the Snapdragon X Elite umbrella. According to files for the Adreno GPU driver, there may be not just six, but 10 different models of the Snapdragon X -- and three of those are Plus chips, which we've previously only seen one of.

Read more
Hacker claims to have hit Apple days after hacking AMD
The Apple logo is displayed at the Apple Store June 17, 2015 on Fifth Avenue in New York City

Data breaches happen all the time, but when the giants get hit, it's impossible not to wonder what kind of critical data may become exposed. Earlier this week, notorious cybercriminal Intelbroker reported that they managed to hack AMD. Now, they followed up with claims about hacking Apple, and went as far as to share some internal source code on a hacking forum.

As Apple has yet to comment, all we have to go off is the forum post, first shared by HackManac on X (formerly Twitter). In the post, Intelbroker states that Apple suffered a data breach that led to the exposure of the source code for some of its internal tools. The tools include AppleConnect-SSO, Apple-HWE-Confluence-Advanced. There's been no mention of any customer data being leaked, which is good news, but there could still be some impact on Apple if this proves to be true.

Read more