
Engineer Teaches Robots Through 100s of Practice Sessions
In China's northeast, a robot engineer is teaching humanoid robots to move like humans by demonstrating actions hundreds of times while wearing motion-capture technology. Her patient training is helping create robots that can safely work alongside people in real-world environments.
Teaching a robot to pick up an object sounds simple, but Wang Tingting knows it takes hundreds of repetitions to get it right.
At a bionic robot innovation center in Changchun, Jilin Province, Wang works as a robot engineer training humanoid machines to move with human-like precision. She straps on motion-capture equipment and demonstrates tasks like grasping, walking, and arranging objects while the robots record and learn from her movements.
The training process involves four key stages: action demonstration, data collection, precise calibration, and repeated error correction. What looks like a basic sorting motion requires Wang to perform it hundreds of times, adjusting and fine-tuning until the robot can execute it accurately every single time.
Her work isn't just about getting robots to move. It's about ensuring they operate safely and stably when they eventually work in real environments alongside humans.

The training ground where Wang works represents a growing field where engineers serve as teachers, translating human movement into robotic capability. Each session brings the robots closer to performing practical tasks in factories, warehouses, and other workplaces.
Why This Inspires
Wang's dedication shows how human patience and expertise remain essential even as we build advanced machines. Her willingness to repeat the same motion hundreds of times demonstrates the careful, methodical work happening behind the scenes in robotics innovation.
The bionic robots Wang trains could eventually take on dangerous or repetitive tasks, keeping human workers safer while learning from the very people they'll work beside. Her role bridges the gap between human skill and mechanical precision, creating technology that enhances rather than simply replaces human capability.
As humanoid robots move from research labs into practical applications, engineers like Wang are the crucial link making that transition possible. Their work today is building the foundation for safer, more capable robots tomorrow.
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Based on reporting by Google: robotics innovation
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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