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Thread: Kengoro, Kojiro, Kenshiro, musculoskeletal humanoid robots, JSK Laboratory, Tokyo, Japan

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    Advanced Musculoskeletal Humanoid Robot Kojiro

    Uploaded on Feb 15, 2010

    Advanced musculoskeletal humanoid robot Kojiro. Developed at the JSK Robotics Laboratory at the University of Tokyo. Demo of spine motion.

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    Robot Copies Your Muscles and Bones

    Published on Dec 10, 2012

    Meet Kenshiro, developed by Japanese researchers as a bio-inspired humanoid robot. Learn more:
    "Kenshiro Robot Gets New Muscles and Bones"

    by Angelica Lim
    December 11, 2012

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    Kengoro the robot that sweats

    Uploaded on Oct 13, 2016

    This humanoid robot developed at the University of Tokyo cools its motors by sweating.
    "This Robot Can Do More Push-Ups Because It Sweats"

    by Evan Ackerman
    October 13, 2016

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    Published on Nov 18, 2016



    Published on Nov 18, 2016

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    Kengoro the robot that sweats

    Published on Dec 2, 2016

    This humanoid robot developed at the University of Tokyo cools its motors by sweating.

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    Flexibility is the Key to a Good “Workout,” for Human-Resembling Robots

    Published on Dec 20, 2017

    Engineers in Japan have constructed two humanoids that successfully replicate human-like movement during physical activity. The robots, named Kengoro and Kenshiro, can perform multiple push-ups, crunches, stretches and other whole-body exercises – feats not possible for earlier versions of human-mimicking bots to perform. Kengoro and Kenshiro’s developers say the humanoids may help researchers better understand how humans move during athletic sports, aid in the development of artificial limbs and whole bodies, and advance the design of crash-test dummies.
    "Are robots edging closer to being 'alive'? Scientists create droids that SWEAT just like humans while doing press-ups to keep themselves cool"
    Researchers built two models of the humanoids called Kengoro and Kenshiro
    Experts recreated the intricacies of the human skeleton and surrounding tissue
    The pair have rib cages, flexible spines as well as synthetic ligaments and joints
    The result is machines that can perform a range of complex life-like movements

    by Tim Collins
    December 21, 2017

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