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The future of robots is looking ever more meaty as MIT researchers grow first bidirectional muscle t

Published: January 01, 0001 Reading Time: Approx. 8 mins

When you close your eyes and imagine futuristic robots, there's a good chance the image you've conjured is shiny and chrome. Maybe it's something straight out of Cyberpunk 2077, or closer to the Boston Dynamics-style bots, complete with intimidating dance moves as they take over the world. I've got both good and bad news for you. The good news is that the robots are definitely coming, the bad news is that they might be made of meat. That's if these MIT scientists have anything to say about it.

Meat robots aren't a new concept, and both artists and scientists have been working on them for a while. The potential for biological based robotics is huge, as they'll be more flexible and have the ability to squeeze into smaller spaces. They may even be more efficient, especially when it comes to certain tasks like moving through liquids. One of the current major hurdles stopping us from developing such tissue-based terminators is figuring out how to grow muscle that can pull in more than one direction. Until now, they just weren't ambiturners.

"With the iris design, we believe we have demonstrated the first skeletal muscle-powered robot [[link]] that generates force in more than one direction. That [[link]] was uniquely enabled by this stamp approach," says Ritu Raman, the Eugene Bell career development professor of tissue engineering in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering.

"One of the cool things about natural muscle tissues is, they don’t just point in one direction. Take for instance, the circular musculature in our iris and around our trachea. And even within our arms and legs, muscle cells don’t point straight, but at an angle," Raman notes. "Natural muscle has multiple orientations in the tissue, but we haven’t been able to replicate that in our engineered muscles."

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