Electronic skin giving robots ‘power of human touch’ developed in Scotland

1
Jamie F
Updated October 20, 2022
Published October 20, 2022
We may earn a commission via links on our site. Why support us?

An Edinburgh-based robotics company called Touchlab is developing robot ‘skin’ that can be wrapped around any surface and will allow robots to “feel texture, and sense pain like a human would,” the company claims.

The e-skin, which uses a technology called quantum tunneling, allows robots to sense pressure and sensations such as slippage rather than simply force, in a manner similar to human skin. It can use deep learning and analytic software to identify objects and different textured surfaces through touch.

“Our mission is to make this electronic skin for robots to give machines the power of human touch,” Zaki Hussein, Touchlab’s co-founder and CEO, told TechCrunch.

While the company is not developing the robot skin with any sexual function in mind, the sextech potential for a robot with skin that reacts like a human’s are obvious. Touchlab already works with humanoid robots, and is looking to use its technology in hospitals and other care settings.

Each section of ‘e-skin’ the company is developing uses tactile sensing regions and four wires, each about as thick as two human hairs. Sections can be customized in terms of size and shape. While they are designed to allow a robot to ‘feel’ like a human does, the e-skin sections don’t resemble human skin, so the experience is likely to be a bit of a one-way relationship for now.

It can, however, be paired with technology such as virtual reality haptic gloves and bodysuits, which react to the data from the e-skin. “We can use the full potential of the best haptic interface of the day, but there is a point where the robot is feeling more than the user is able to,” Hussein says.

https://twitter.com/MacfarlaneJamie/status/1509857370394042370

Touchlab Electronic Skin Trials

Touchlab expects to conduct its first real-world pilot studies in 2023, with Hussein saying that the e-skin will allow robots to do “dexterous and challenging activities”.

Sex robots currently on the market tend to not have particularly high-tech skin, essentially using similar, non-electronic materials to high-end sex dolls. Some companies have worked on technology such as artificial skin that warms itself, for human-like realism, but there are no sex dolls available with sophisticated e-skin.

Earlier in 2022 Japanese researchers developed a new form of self-healing so-called ‘living skin’, that they claimed would usher in a new era of robots made from both organic and artificial material.

Read next: Dawn of the laughing sex bots? Researchers teach robot how to empathetically giggle

Article by
Jamie F is a freelance writer, contributing to outlets such as The Guardian, The Times, The Telegraph, CNN and Vice, among others. He is also the creative force behind the Audible podcast Beast Master.
Get in touch
By the same author…
  • dating appdate nov 2024

    Dating appdates (Nov 2024): Apps for news junkies and the ‘visual generation’, prizes for the ghosted, and more

    Jamie F/
    November 19, 2024
  • meta robot hand

    Meta’s latest robotics project brings ‘human-level’ touch to machines

    Jamie F/
    November 14, 2024
  • bellesa silent toys

    Quiet revolution? Bellesa launches ‘silent’ vibrator range

    Jamie F/
    November 12, 2024
On the same topic…
  • sex robots cheating

    ‘Is sex with a robot cheating?’ What 10 years of research tells us about sex robots

    Jamie F/
    May 2, 2024
  • sara humanoid robot

    ‘She should be nice, not talking sex’: Saudi Sara shuns salacious subjects

    Jamie F/
    April 14, 2024
  • Love and Sex with Robots 2024 Conference Details

    Love & Sex With Robots hybrid conference to include emotions, clones and roboethics

    Jamie F/
    April 8, 2024

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *