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Is Haptic Technology the Next Big Thing in Robotics and Virtual Reality?

Haptic technology, a novel robot control technique, is being developed to provide tactile feedback to the human surgeon while controlling the automated movement.
Fremont, CA: Artificial touch may provide facts to customers, support them in completing a task, increase or replace various faculties, and bring vividness and authenticity to virtual contact. Humans examine these applications in light of various haptic technologies and the forms that haptic devices might take.
Haptics is the science and technology of transmitting and receiving data by touch. In its most basic form, "haptic" refers to something that has to do with the sensation of touch.
Haptic Touch is a sort of haptic input that uses vibrations to simulate feelings such as pushing a button or scrolling through a list when done on a screen. For example, if users press a finger on an application icon, they will feel a vibration while a menu appears.
Artificial touch and robotics
Robots are capable of incredibly precise movement; nevertheless, they must get commanded precisely in order to perform to their full potential. For example, the arm of a robotic surgeon can move more predictably and accurately than the greatest human surgeon's arm. The key is to command the robot surgeon's arm with human capabilities and provide the specialist with closed circle movement control.
Haptic technology, a novel robot control technique, is being developed to provide tactile feedback to the human surgeon while controlling the automated movement.
Haptic technology provides tactile feedback to controllers and allows clients to interact, feel, and manipulate three-layered things physically. They have complete control over the location of the robot's end-effector. Similarly, 3D limit data may get incorporated into the robot's control profile to prevent movement into constrained areas where it could do serious harm, leveraging haptic controls suited for automated medical process application.
Artificial touch and VR
Haptics in Virtual Reality (VR) adds another dimension by allowing customers to experience the virtual environment through faculties such as voice-based or vision-based interaction and the sense of touch. To acquire a reasonable understanding of the simulated environment, it is critical to address the drenching and connection elements of VR.
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