News

University of Tokyo researchers have devised a way to wrap a robot's face with living human skin. First, the engineers grew the living tissue from human skin cells on a scaffold of collagen, the ...
In a nutshell Scientists successfully transmitted light through an entire adult human head for the first time, overcoming extreme attenuation of 10^18 to detect individual photons The technique can ...
Human face recognition is what humans are good at. ... The pictures of these human faces had natural human skin, and we smoothed the skin; the eyes had their natural light reflections, ...
Face mites were first discovered in the human ear canal in 1841; soon thereafter they were found in the eyebrows and eyelashes. Since then, we’ve learned that they live not only among towering ...
Million-year-old face fossil sheds new light on ancient human migrations. Scientists say a fossil of a partial face from a early human ancestor in Spain is between 1.1 and 1.4 million years old ...
Using light-shielding curtains and motorized closing devices, a comparative experiment was conducted on 19 participants under three conditions: natural light for 20 minutes before waking up (IA ...
The light needs to be bright enough (at least 60 watts, depending on the size of your bathroom and what the fixture can handle) so you can clearly see yourself but warm enough in tone so your skin ...
Blue light usually comes from the sun but also from digital screens and LED lights. Some experts believe artificial sources may be causing eye damage in humans, but animal studies are inconclusive ...
The ability to create skin that can move and express emotions opens up new possibilities for human-robot interaction. It could lead to more empathetic and relatable robotic assistants in various ...
Until now, artificial gels have either managed to replicate high stiffness or natural skin’s self-healing properties, but not both. Now, a team of researchers from Aalto University and the ...
Robot smiles with living skin. That's not creepy at all If humanoid robots make you a bit queasy — would it help if they had fleshy faces that can smile at you?
Zoologist Dan-Erik Nilsson demonstrates how the complex human eye could have evolved through natural selection acting on small variations. Starting with a simple patch of light sensitive cells ...