A new wearable system uses stretchable electronics and artificial intelligence to interpret human gestures with high accuracy even in chaotic, high-motion environments.
Altia was founded in 1991. Its customers include automotive OEMs and Tier 1s like Continental Automotive, Denso, Stellantis, Ford Motor Company, General Motors, Honda, Hyundai, Renault, Valeo, Visteon ...
LIPS Corporation, a global leader in 3D machine vision technologies, and Namuga, South Korea's leading optical module ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Engineers develop AI-powered wearable that turns everyday gestures into robot commands
AI-powered wearable cleans noisy motion signals to let users control machines with simple gestures in real-world conditions.
In the spirit of punting ponies into the present Powersports industry, electric motorcycle brand Arc has continued to contribute to the community’s focus on safety technology with their unit of choice ...
In the 2010s, the automotive industry ventured into touch control interfaces, with pioneers like Tesla, Mercedes Benz, and Nissan leading the charge. However, with the European New Car Assessment ...
SRMIST and Schneider Electric launch a Centre of Excellence to enhance student exposure to Human Machine Interface ...
Industry 5.0: How the human-machine interface is gaining attention Your email has been sent When Industry 4.0 came on the scene in 2015, it promised connectivity and seamless business processes ...
An interdisciplinary team of researchers has developed a human–machine interface that improves the prosthetic connection to the residual limb, making it more comfortable and reliably effective.
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