To obviate this critical incompatibility, experts at Harvard University's Wyss Institute and Tufts University have created biological robots using cells extracted from the human windpipe ...
The work follows up previous research, led by some of the same researchers who developed the first biological robots, dubbed "xenobots," from frog stem cells. Now, they've one-upped themselves by ...
One long-existing question was whether these cells can be used for other tasks — like biological robots — after they have specialized into a specific tissue type, with a recent study by [Gizem ...
Ultimately, Muragaki believes robots such as AIREC could help perform ... This led to an interest in higher brain function, and the biological mechanisms behind our decision-making processes.