The artificial skin was developed by scientists from RMIT University in Australia, who claim it reacts to painful sensations as quickly as it takes nerve signals to reach the brain. Lead researcher Professor Madhu Bhaskar said the feedback system could pave the way for next-generation biomedical technologies and intelligent robotics. [Read: These tech trends defined 2020 so far, according to 5 founders] The researchers built their prototype devices by combining stretchable wearable electronics, temperature-reactive coatings, and electronic memory cells that mimic the way the brain recalls and retains information. These three technologies enable the skin to react when pressure, heat, or pain hits a certain threshold. “While some existing technologies have used electrical signals to mimic different levels of pain, these new devices can react to real mechanical pressure, temperature and pain, and deliver the right electronic response,” said researcher Md Ataur Rahman. “It means our artificial skin knows the difference between gently touching a pin with your finger or accidentally stabbing yourself with it – a critical distinction that has never been achieved before electronically.” You can check out their research paper at the Wiley Online Library. So you’re interested in AI? Then join our online event, TNW2020, where you’ll hear how artificial intelligence is transforming industries and businesses.

Electronic skin that  feels  pain could lead to smarter prosthetics and robots - 11