Scientists have developed a color-changing tactile sensor that lets robots visualize touch in real time, paving the way for more precise manufacturing, prosthetics, and robotic surgery.
Tucson-area optics firm Geost has been supplying sensor systems for U.S. defense and intelligence satellites since its founding by a University of Arizona optics Ph.D. two decades ago. Now, Geost is ...
Researchers have developed an artificial intelligence model capable of tracking a person’s sleep stages using only three ...
Spanish control systems specialist Sunner has launched True Wind, a predictive monitoring system that detects wind-induced ...
Innoviz has partnered with Regulus to enhance counter-drone operations using LiDAR for precise tracking of low-flying threats ...
You know the origins of all your ingredients and everything that happened during the processing, cooling and freezing of your ...
Researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst are using eye-tracking technology to help understand how nurses ...
Falling space junk is becoming a real-world hazard, and scientists have found a clever new way to track it using instruments already listening to the Earth itself. By tapping into networks of ...
A standard floodlight illuminates what moves. This Reolink illuminates it, tracks it with 6x zoom, identifies whether it's a ...
A health-tracking Apple 'iRing' is in development, according to a leaker. It could take on the likes of Oura and Samsung ...
Front and center at Automate 2026, machine vision solution suppliers showed how vision systems are foundational to industrial automation. Explore some of the products ...
Deploy powerful computer vision instantly. Meet CamThink NeoEyes NE503: a 20 TOPS 4K Edge AI camera featuring open-source ...