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Researchers in China have developed a robot that identifies different plant species at various stages of growth by "touching" their leaves with an electrode. The robot can measure properties such ...
A worker was killed in a food sorting plant in South Korea after he was crushed by a robot. The incident occurred Wednesday at a pepper sorting plant at the Donggoseong Export Agricultural Complex ...
For $32,000, the robot autonomously trundles through vineyards pruning vines, testing soil, and keeping an eye on plant health. And Harvest Automation offers a bot that rolls around plant nurseries ...
The robot revolution is coming. But instead of death machines dragging us off to work in their plutonium mines, we'll get helpful little friends like Pepper from SoftBank and Aldebaran. The little ...
This photo provided by the South Korea Gyeongsangnam-do Fire Department shows the interior of a vegetable packaging plant after a robot's deadly crush with a worker was reported, in Goseong, South ...
This robot has ‘eyes’ that can see dying plants before farmers can. ... Caterpillars and mildew have messed with the chili peppers pictured below. ... The cameras monitor the plants 24-7, ...
That's where Pepper comes in to play -- the funeral robot could act as priest when a human is not available. Nissei's executive adviser, Michio Inamura, says using a robot priest would cost about ...
So far, the robot has been able to identify ten different plant species with an average accuracy of 97.7 percent. The recognition accuracy also depends on how complicated the plant structures are.
The robot identified 10 different plant species with an average accuracy of 97.7% and identified leaves of the flowering bauhinia plant with 100% accuracy at various growth stages.