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There's a new version of a very quick quadrupedal robot from MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). While four-legged robots have garnered no end of attention over ...
AI-powered simulations let the robot learn all by itself how to efficiently move on all types of terrain.
MIT's cheetah robot, also funded by DARPA, may offer some insight into how to build a stealthier bot. Follow Elizabeth Palermo @techEpalermo. Follow Live Science @livescience, Facebook & Google+.
MIT scientists build stealthy robot 'cheetah' Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have developed a battery-powered robot bounds across surfaces at up to 10 miles per hour.
The robotic cheetah developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) just keeps getting more advanced. Since its debut in 2015, the four-legged, dog-sized robot known as "Mini Cheetah ...
The four-legged Mini Cheetah robot from MIT just got one step closer to earning its epic name, thanks to a style of machine learning that's reminiscent of Neo in The Matrix. With an unnatural ...
A team of researchers at MIT have figured out a way to make a four-legged, cheetah-like robot run and jump more gracefully and efficiently. To get there, they studied animals like dogs and cats ...
So, yeah, now they’re building a robot cheetah. No, it can’t combine with four others to make a really big man-sized one.
MIT scientists think a robot that moves like a cheetah could help rescue people in disaster zones. It's blind, but scientists designed its flexible joints and agile limbs to be just as versatile ...
It's not quite as big as Boston Dynamics' Cheetah robot, and not nearly as terrifying. But the adorable four-legged, Swiss-made, Cheetah-Cub robot has a few tricks of its own. Built at the ...
Sangbae Kim has built the robot of the future, and it runs on four legs. Called the “cheetah-bot,” the robot was created at the Biomimetics Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ...
MIT's cheetah robot, also funded by DARPA, may offer some insight into how to build a stealthier bot. Follow Elizabeth Palermo @techEpalermo. Follow Live Science @livescience, Facebook & Google+.