Researchers in Arkansas and Georgia have shown that delicate fresh-market blackberries typically picked by human hands to maintain quality, can now be picked by robots, too.
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Rob Felt, Georgia Tech
The Georgia Institute of Technology is one of 16 academic institutions selected for Toyota Research Institute s (TRI) collaborative research program.
Founded in 2015 and now in its second wave of investment with top universities, TRI will invest more than $75 million over the next five years. The university partners will focus on breakthroughs around tough technological challenges in key research priority areas of automated driving, robotics, and machine-assisted cognition. Georgia Tech is honored to work closely with TRI to advance robotics in key fields. It s an exciting start to what we hope will be a longer-term collaboration, said Seth Hutchinson, executive director of Georgia Tech s Institute for Robotics and Intelligent Machines and professor and KUKA Chair for Robotics in the School of Interactive Computing.