Researchers have built an artificial intelligence-based wearable computer with digital eyes that could help future robots or astronauts "see' and discover signs of life in the desert-like conditions found on
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planets , for that matter) may employ the use of artificial intelligence integrated into spacesuits to enhance the ability of astronauts in taking scientific data while exploring. The AI assistance co...
November 4, 2009 by Lin Edwards Enlarge Two 'astronauts' exploring a stream near the MDRS. University of Chicago geoscientist, Patrick McGuire and his team, are developing a system to recognize the signs of life in barren...
The innovation might come in handy in the future One of the things about space exploration, and exploring other planets directly is that everything needs to function as efficiently as possible. That is to say, since we don't...
One of the things about space exploration, and exploring other planets directly is that everything needs to function as efficiently as possible. That is to say, since we don't have yet the technology to go to Mars on a daily...
At the remote Mars Desert Research Station in Utah, astronauts wearing artificial-intelligence enhanced spacesuits with digital eyes that can see in the infrared what human eyes are unable to see developed by Patrick McGuire (a...
If University of Chicago geoscientist Patrick McGuire starts calling the shots, NASA won't have to decide between sending a person or a robot into space. They could just send a "cyborg astrobiologists" — or advanced artificial...
Equipped with wearable AI systems and digital eyes that see what human eyes can’t, space explorers of the future could be not just astronauts, but “cyborg astrobiologists.” That’s the vision of a research team led by Patrick...