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There were drawbacks. The robot is tethered to an external power source and scientists need to find a way to integrate the source before it can be deployed in the real world. "There are many challenges to actively moving soft robots and no easy solutions," Tufts neurobiologist Barry Trimmer, who worked on the caterpillar robot, said in an email. Robotics researcher Carmel Majidi, who heads the Soft Machines Lab at Carnegie Mellon University, said the latest robot is innovative even as it builds on previous work. "It's a simple concept, but they're getting lifelike biological motions," he said. ___ Online: Journal: http://www.pnas.org/ Whitesides lab: http://gmwgroup.harvard.edu/
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