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Thread: Biorobotics Laboratory (BioRob), Institute of Bioengineering, School of Engineering, EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland

  1. #1

    Biorobotics Laboratory (BioRob), Institute of Bioengineering, School of Engineering, EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland

    Website - biorob.epfl.ch

    youtube.com/epflnews

    youtube.com/epflbiorob

    EPFL on Wikipedia

    Head - Auke Jan Ijspeert

    Projects:

    Salamandra robotica II, salamander-like robot

    Pleurobot, salamander-like robot

    Roombots

    Cheetah-cub, quadruped robot

  2. #2


    Flying Robot That Can Crash and Keep Flying

    Published on Jun 14, 2012

    EPFL researchers at the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems have created a bio-inspired flying robot that can withstand collisions with obstacles in its environment. A unique Active Recovery System allows the robot to pick itself back up after a collision and launch itself back into the air. Such a design could prove useful in exploring hard to reach areas, such as caves or irradiated nuclear power plants.

  3. #3


    A robot that runs like a cat

    Published on Jun 16, 2013

    Thanks to the design of its legs, which faithfully mimic feline morphology, EPFL's four-legged "cheetah-cub robot" shares the advantages of its biological model: it is small, light and runs very fast. In the long term, this type of machine, which is still in an experimental stage, could be used in search and rescue missions or for exploration.

  4. #4


    Telepresence robots can give people with disabilities the feeling of being home

    Uploaded on Jun 24, 2015

    Jose del R. Millan, Defitech Chair for non-invasive brain machine interfaces at EPFL, and Robert Leeb, from EPFL's Center for Neuroprosthetics, explain how people with disabilities can control telepresence robots or a wheelchair using only mental commands.

  5. #5


    Awesome BioRobots Inspired by Animal Movements!

    Published on Nov 11, 2015

    Roboticists from Switzerland's EPFL institute bring us four awesome robots that are designed to mimic the movements and gait of animals. We chat with these biorobotics researchers about the lessons learned from studying snakes and quadrupeds, and how their robots can be used in practical situations. Plus, these robots are actually pretty cute, and their lifelike movements make great animated GIFs!

  6. #6


    Meet the Ijspeert Lab

    Published on Apr 11, 2017

    BIORob, EPFL specialise in bioinspired robots. Meet Professor Auke Ijspeert and his NCCR Robotics members, Kamilo Melo and Tomislav Horvat.

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