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Pioneering synthetic muscle robot showcases eerily human-like movement
In a dimly lit warehouse, a groundbreaking robotic creation named Protoclone has emerged, marking a significant advancement in biomimetic robotics. Clone Robotics has unveiled their faceless android, suspended by cables, demonstrating unprecedented synthetic muscle technology that mirrors human muscular function.
The robot's translucent skin reveals an intricate network of over 1,000 synthetic muscles - surpassing the human body's 639 - responding to electrical stimulation with startlingly natural movements. This sophisticated system enables fluid motion in its arms, legs, neck, knees, and shoulders, closely resembling human biomechanics.
The promotional video captures Protoclone's capabilities in stark detail, showing the android's limbs moving with spasm-like contractions that closely mimic human muscle activity. This latest iteration builds upon an earlier prototype, which, though lacking legs, had already demonstrated remarkably human-like movements and expressions.
Clone Robotics presents Protoclone as an anatomically correct android, despite its intentionally faceless design. While its appearance and movements in the shadowy environment might evoke science fiction imagery, the technological achievement represents a significant milestone in robotic muscle development and biomechanical engineering.
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