AI Medical Compendium Topic

Explore the latest research on artificial intelligence and machine learning in medicine.

Lizards

Showing 1 to 10 of 17 articles

Clear Filters

Photo-Detachable Self-Cleaning Surfaces Inspired by Gecko Toepads.

Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids
Strong, reversible, and self-cleaning adhesion in the toe pads of geckos allow the lizards to climb on a variety of vertical and inverted surfaces, regardless of the surface conditions, whether hydrophobic or hydrophilic, smooth or tough, wet or dry,...

Motion Control of a Gecko-like Robot Based on a Central Pattern Generator.

Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
To solve the problem of the motion control of gecko-like robots in complex environments, a central pattern generator (CPG) network model of motion control was designed. The CPG oscillation model was first constructed using a sinusoidal function, resu...

Machine learning accurately predicts the multivariate performance phenotype from morphology in lizards.

PloS one
Completing the genotype-to-phenotype map requires rigorous measurement of the entire multivariate organismal phenotype. However, phenotyping on a large scale is not feasible for many kinds of traits, resulting in missing data that can also cause prob...

A gecko-inspired robot with CPG-based neural control for locomotion and body height adaptation.

Bioinspiration & biomimetics
Today's gecko-inspired robots have shown the ability of omnidirectional climbing on slopes with a low centre of mass. However, such an ability cannot efficiently cope with bumpy terrains or terrains with obstacles. In this study, we developed a gecko...

A Gecko-Inspired Robot with a Flexible Spine Driven by Shape Memory Alloy Springs.

Soft robotics
The majority of sprawling-posture quadrupedal vertebrates, such as geckos and lizards, adopt a cyclical lateral swing pattern of their trunk that is coordinated with limb movements to provide extraordinary flexibility and mobility. Inspired by the ge...

Lizard Body Temperature Acquisition and Lizard Recognition Using Artificial Intelligence.

Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
The acquisition of the body temperature of animals kept in captivity in biology laboratories is crucial for several studies in the field of animal biology. Traditionally, the acquisition process was carried out manually, which does not guarantee much...

Leveraging camera traps and artificial intelligence to explore thermoregulation behaviour.

The Journal of animal ecology
Behavioural thermoregulation has critical ecological and physiological consequences that profoundly influence individual fitness and species distributions, particularly in the context of climate change. However, field monitoring of this behaviour rem...

Wall-climbing performance of gecko-inspired robot with soft feet and digits enhanced by gravity compensation.

Bioinspiration & biomimetics
Gravitational forces can induce deviations in body posture from desired configurations in multi-legged arboreal robot locomotion with low leg stiffness, affecting the contact angle between the swing leg's end-effector and the climbing surface during ...

Design of a bipedal robot for water running based on a six-linkage mechanism inspired by basilisk lizards.

Bioinspiration & biomimetics
Legged robots have received widespread attention in academia and engineering owing to their excellent terrain adaptability. However, most legged robots can only adapt to high-hardness environments instead of flexible environments. Expanding the motio...

Machine learning-based optimal design of fibrillar adhesives.

Journal of the Royal Society, Interface
Fibrillar adhesion, observed in animals like beetles, spiders and geckos, relies on nanoscopic or microscopic fibrils to enhance surface adhesion via 'contact splitting'. This concept has inspired engineering applications across robotics, transportat...