For decades, China has endured a low birth rate. Thus, scientists in the country created an advanced robot sitter. It was created from artificial intelligence (AI) to cover and watch for mortal embryos growing in artificial wombs. Despite its status as the world's most vibrant country, China is passing a population growth problem, with the birth rate lately dropping to its smallest position in six decades. Thus, scientists at the Suzhou Institute of Biomedical Engineering and Technology in eastern China's Jiangsu Province developed robots to perform tasks, similar to observing, establishing and manually conforming carbon dioxide, nutrients and more in embryos. The robot can also rank embryos grounded on their experimental eventuality. The exploration paper, published in the Jo...
Read MoreTag: artificial intelligence
Artificial intelligence has made a profound leap by creating robots that can give rise to offspring. Scientists from US named as Sam Kriegman, Douglas Blackiston, Michael Levin and Josh Bongard has created the first living robots and they claim that they can now reproduce on their own. The parent robot and babies are called Xenobots 3.0 which are entirely biological in nature. Now lets look at what are Xenobots. Xenobots are world’s first living robots developed in 2020 from stem cells of the African clawed frog – Xenopus laevis by US scientists. Experiments revealed that these cluster cells could move, work together in groups and self – heal. They are different from other robots as they are made of aluminum, plastics, spur gears or sprockets. They are a combination of molecul...
Read MoreAmid the global arms race and automation of military weapons, a campaign named as " stop killing robots" is gaining pace. As major military powers invest in automation and AI technology, concerns are also growing about the efficiency of such robots. Recently, a student campaign called #StopCambridgeKillerRobots was launched against Cambridge University research. The report says the research in question aims to develop lethal autonomous weapons (LAWs) which have been dubbed as 'killer robots.' The research was funded by defense industry-related companies who have provided grants worth billions of dollars to Cambridge. Reports says that major military powers like the US, China, and Russia are heavily investing in AI weapons and robotics. The US Army is reportedly developing a new sy...
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