Results 291 to 300 of about 1,107,373 (311)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
2009
Human intelligence is acquired through a prolonged period of maturation and growth during which a single fertilized egg first turns into an embryo, then grows into a newborn baby, and eventually becomes an adult individual—which, typically before growing old and dying, reproduces.
Lungarella, M, Gómez, G
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Human intelligence is acquired through a prolonged period of maturation and growth during which a single fertilized egg first turns into an embryo, then grows into a newborn baby, and eventually becomes an adult individual—which, typically before growing old and dying, reproduces.
Lungarella, M, Gómez, G
openaire +1 more source
Smart robots [control robotics]
Engineering & Technology, 2009It may be an old fantasy, but the basic premise that we will one day engineer machines that are at least as smart as us and whose behaviour is indistinguishable from ours is, according to many roboticists, closer to reality than we might like to think.
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2013
To evaluate the capabilities of the insect brain model different robotic platforms have been considered. The different blocks of the cognitive architecture, inspired by MBs and CX, can be used as control systems both for legged and wheeled robots. This chapter reports the characteristics of the robotic platforms including information on the mechanical ...
I. Aleo +5 more
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To evaluate the capabilities of the insect brain model different robotic platforms have been considered. The different blocks of the cognitive architecture, inspired by MBs and CX, can be used as control systems both for legged and wheeled robots. This chapter reports the characteristics of the robotic platforms including information on the mechanical ...
I. Aleo +5 more
openaire +3 more sources
2014
The use of mobile robots in applications is steadily increasing, both in the industrial and the service domains. Most mobile robots achieve locomotion using wheels. As a consequence, they are subject to differential constraints that are nonholonomic, i.e., non-integrable.
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The use of mobile robots in applications is steadily increasing, both in the industrial and the service domains. Most mobile robots achieve locomotion using wheels. As a consequence, they are subject to differential constraints that are nonholonomic, i.e., non-integrable.
openaire +1 more source
Learning Robotics, with Robotics, by Robotics
2016Ilaria Gaudiello, Elisabetta Zibetti
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