The sensor is known as TakkTile, and according to co-creator Leif Jentoft, a graduate student at SEAS, “Despite decades of research, tactile sensing hasn’t moved into general use because it’s been expensive and fragile. It normally costs about $16,000, give or take, to put tactile sensing on a research robot hand. That’s really limited where people can use it. The traditional technology also uses very specialized construction techniques, which can slow down your work. Now, Takktile changes that because it’s based on much simpler and cheaper fabrication methods.”
It relies on a small barometer that senses air pressure to get the job done, and the chip itself is hardy enough to handle a strike from a hammer or a baseball bat, despite being sensitive enough to detect even the slightest of touches. Now this is definitely progress, no?