Filter Options
Date
Image
alt="The dataset contains movements and physiological responses of badminton players and can be used to build AI-driven coaching assistants. This development could improve the quality of forehand clear and backhand drive strokes across all skill levels, from beginners to experts (Credit: SeungJun Kim at GIST)."
CSAIL article

In sports training, practice is the key, but being able to emulate the techniques of professional athletes can take a player’s performance to the next level. AI-based personalized sports coaching assistants assist with this by utilizing published datasets. With cameras and sensors strategically placed on the athlete's body, these systems can track everything, including joint movement patterns, muscle activation levels, and gaze movements.

Image
The Grasping Neural Process uses limited interaction data to help robots understand unclear objects in real-time (Credits: Alex Shipps/MIT CSAIL).
CSAIL article

When robots come across unfamiliar objects, they struggle to account for a simple truth: Appearances aren’t everything. They may attempt to grasp a block, only to find out it’s a literal piece of cake. The misleading appearance of that object could lead the robot to miscalculate physical properties like the object’s weight and center of mass, using the wrong grasp and applying more force than needed.