Updated
Updated · Interesting Engineering · Jun 19
NTNU's Sashimi-Bot Cuts 34 Salmon Slices With 95% Tactile Accuracy
Updated
Updated · Interesting Engineering · Jun 19

NTNU's Sashimi-Bot Cuts 34 Salmon Slices With 95% Tactile Accuracy

3 articles · Updated · Interesting Engineering · Jun 19

Summary

  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology researchers tested Sashimi-Bot on real salmon loins, producing 34 sashimi slices and transferring 26 of 28 board-held pieces to a tray with minimal human help.
  • Three robotic arms handle positioning, knife work and plating, while a GelSight tactile sensor lets the system detect when the blade reaches the cutting board and stop before cutting too deeply.
  • More than 12,000 training samples from 157 cutting motions produced a contact-detection model with 95% accuracy and 99% precision, after the robot first learned fish positioning in simulation through deep reinforcement learning.
  • Six slices that stuck to the knife were all recovered directly from the blade; the only two transfer failures were extremely thin pieces that slipped from the chopsticks.
  • Published in npj Robotics, the project targets a broader robotics challenge—handling soft, deformable materials—with potential uses beyond food processing, including healthcare.

Insights

This robot learned to cut fish in a simulation, but can its artificial 'touch' ever truly replicate a master chef's artistry?
Beyond the sushi bar, how will robots that can feel and handle delicate objects transform industries from surgery to agriculture?
With robots now mastering complex physical skills in virtual worlds, what human job will be the next to undergo a digital rehearsal?