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A team of researchers report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on a new graphene-based sensor design ...
A graphene sensor trained by machine learning can now taste like a human, identifying both basic and complex flavors with stunning accuracy.
An 'electronic tongue' made of transistors and sensors can taste food—a sensation that could be useful for robots and AI in the future.
An electronic tongue that can replicate flavours like cake and fish soup could help recreate food in virtual reality, but can't yet simulate other things that influence taste, such as smell.
Realbotix’s humanoid robot now fluently speaks 15 major languages and supports over 147 additional languages via the cloud.
A computer algorithm has achieved a 98% accuracy in predicting different diseases by analyzing the color of the human tongue. The proposed imaging system can diagnose diabetes, stroke, anemia ...
Her work appears in The New York Times, Real Simple, Vogue, Bon Appetit, Glamour, Time Out, Conde Nast Traveler and several more publications. Food & Wine's Editorial Guidelines Published on June ...
“An e-tongue such as this is able to extract the amount of sweetness [and] sourness, but not taste as a human tongue perceives them,” he says. Journal reference: Science Advances DOI: 10.1126 ...