Keeps Us on Our Toes

March 16, 2017 • by Marc Airhart

Michael Mauk is working on a "digital cerebellum" that mimics the part of the brain that helps us keep from falling. It could help make robots more stable, as well as humans with neurodegenerative diseases.

Robot standing on a soccer pitch preparing to kick a red ball into a net

Worried that smart robots are taking over the world? You'll be relieved to know they still have a long way to go. That is unless you're an artificial intelligence researcher like Peter Stone. One big challenge facing robots that walk and run is that they fall over a lot.

Share


Niels Levy-Thiebaut, Franchesca Untalan and Neha Donthineni

The Alcalde

Star Students: Meet the 2025 President’s Leadership Winners

A scientist sits at a desk writing

Department of Computer Science

University of Texas Theoretical Computer Scientist Wins Gödel Prize

A professor in a UT electrical and computer engineering shirt points at a screen with scientific imagery, as two seated students and another researcher smile and look on.

Cockrell School of Engineering

Can AI Make Critical Communications Chips Easier to Design?