Robots to have 'blood'! Liquid circulating system created to store energy in robots | The Financial Express
Are Robot Pastors the Answer to Religion's Decline? | Mind Matters
Synthetic Intelligence. Why Androids Are More Trustworthy Than… | by Corey Breier | Medium
Biologically Inspired Artificial Skin Improves Sensory Ability of Robots | News | Communications of the ACM
New synthetic muscle breakthrough will create better, nimbler robots - 311 Institute
iRonCub Synthetic Humanoid Robot
Erica, the 'most beautiful and intelligent' android, leads Japan's robot revolution | Robots | The Guardian
Humanoid Robot to Fly Wearing Shiny Pants With an Iron Man Jetpack
Humanoid robot - Wikipedia
IBM debuts chemical synthesis robot
Science 2010 in pictures: Zombie ants, Neanderthal humans and synthetic life | Robots for kids, Robot, Robot design
Next up for robots: Synthetic muscle | The Week
Sensitive synthetic skin makes for hug-safe humanoid robot
Sensitive synthetic skin makes for hug-safe humanoid robot
Using an Artificial Intelligence in Robots Today - vifit.org
Biologically-inspired artificial skin improves sensory ability of robots
Life-Like Robots and Synthetic Humans - The Centre for Global Inclusion | Home of the GDIB
Researchers To Develop Synthetic Skin That Feels Pain - MobyGeek.com
Synthetic psychology -- understanding behavior through robotics
A first-ever walking, talking bionic man stands on display at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC, USA, on Thursday, October 18, 2013. The model is a 6-foot-tall robot
ArtStation - Killtype: Synthetic robot posing
Synthetic muscle breakthrough could lead to 'lifelike' robots | Engadget
Sideshow Total Recall Synthetic Robot Soldier Statue - The Toyark - News
ArtStation - Killtype: Synthetic robot posing
Artificial Synthetic Life (Lunar State) | Future | Fandom
1000toys - TOA Heavy Industries Synthetic Human - Page 25 | Cyborgs art, Character design, Sci fi
Synthetic Emotions in Humanoids – A Brief Overview
How Synthetic Brains Can Advance Robotics - JSTOR Daily