Energy News
ROBO SPACE
AI evolved legged robots reconfigure run and survive damage
illustration only

AI evolved legged robots reconfigure run and survive damage

by Clarence Oxford
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Mar 29, 2026
Northwestern University engineers have created modular legged robots with what they describe as athletic intelligence, capable of operating outdoors, adapting to damage and reshaping themselves into new configurations as needed. Called legged metamachines, the systems consist of autonomous Lego-like modules that snap together in many combinations, with each module functioning as a complete robot containing its own motor, battery and computer.

Individually, a half meter long module can roll, turn and jump, but the most versatile and resilient behavior emerges when several are connected into a larger machine. Depending on how the modules are arranged, the combined robot undulates like a seal, bounds like a lizard or springs similar to a kangaroo, and it can flip itself upright when overturned, hop over obstacles and perform mid air spins. Because the overall machine is literally a robot made of robots, broken sections do not become dead weight but remain active, continue moving on their own and can later reattach.

To discover effective body designs, the team used artificial intelligence to evolve robot configurations rather than hand designing them around familiar animal like templates. The researchers started from an evolutionary algorithm that imitates natural selection, seeding it with digital models of the modular legs, which resemble a pair of rods joined by a central spherical hub that houses the control electronics, power and actuator. The algorithm was tasked with finding body plans that provided efficient and versatile locomotion and then simulated thousands of candidates, keeping the best performers, discarding weak designs and generating new variants through virtual mutation and recombination.

Over many iterations, this Darwinian style search, accelerated by computation, produced new robotic body shapes that human engineers had not anticipated. In the evolved designs, modular legs can act as legs, spines or tails depending on their position in the larger structure, and the resulting machines coordinate rotation about a single axis at each joint into complex whole body motions. According to the researchers, this process compresses an evolutionary timescale that would take millions or billions of years in nature into minutes or hours of simulation time.

The team then built physical three , four and five legged metamachines that embodied the highest performing evolved designs. In outdoor field trials, these robots ran over rough terrain including gravel, grass, tree roots, leaves, sand, mud and uneven brick surfaces, without requiring elaborate calibration or retraining for each new environment. The machines demonstrated the ability to jump, spin, right themselves when flipped upside down and continue traveling across unstructured ground.

A key result is that the metamachines retain functionality even when damaged. If a leg breaks off, the remaining structure automatically adjusts its gait and continues moving, while the detached module is still able to roll independently and potentially rejoin the group later. The researchers report that every module can sense its surroundings, move, compute and learn, enabling the overall system to be rapidly assembled, repaired, redesigned and recombined while still operating in the field.

The work extends earlier research from the same lab in which an AI algorithm was used to design small soft walking robots from scratch, demonstrating that evolution inspired computation can instantly produce viable machines. Those earlier robots could perform only basic walking on a tabletop and could not sense or coordinate their own bodies, but they showed that AI driven evolution can generate functioning designs markedly different from conventional engineering solutions. The new legged metamachines apply similar principles at larger scale and in more realistic conditions, integrating sensing, control and modular actuation into robust outdoor capable platforms.

By combining physical modularity with AI based design, the researchers argue that robots can be made less like rigid pre programmed tools and more like adaptive systems that behave analogously to evolving life forms. They suggest that such metamachines could be rapidly configured for new tasks or environments and offer inherent resilience for applications where components are likely to fail but the mission must continue. The team frames the project as a step toward machines that do not just survive exposure to the real world but adjust and reorganize themselves in response to it.

Research Report:Agile legged locomotion in reconfigurable modular robots

Related Links
Northwestern University
All about the robots on Earth and beyond!

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
ROBO SPACE
Left, right and faithful unite to demand human control over AI
Washington, United States (AFP) Mar 4, 2026
A coalition spanning US conservative figure Steve Bannon, progressives, labor unions and faith groups announced Wednesday a joint declaration of principles on artificial intelligence, framing the effort as a pushback against what they called Silicon Valley's reckless deployment of AI. The declaration lays out 34 principles grouped under five themes: keeping humans in charge, avoiding concentration of power, protecting the human experience, human agency and liberty, and corporate accountability. ... read more

ROBO SPACE
Denmark inaugurates first flight with sustainable fuel

Ethanol method boosts low temperature NOx cleanup catalysts

Ancient guano drove Chincha coastal power

Neem seed biochar turns waste into thermal energy storage medium

ROBO SPACE
Industrial TOPCon silicon cell sets new efficiency benchmark

Hybrid perovskite device taps power from sun and rain

Defect networks boost performance of next generation perovskite solar cells

Golden bridge tunnel junction design boosts all perovskite tandem solar cell efficiency

ROBO SPACE
China added record wind and solar power in 2025, data shows

UK nets record offshore wind supply in renewables push

Trump gets wrong country, wrong bird in windmill rant

ROBO SPACE
Italy challenges EU over key climate tool

AI giants promise Trump to pay for increased energy needs

Swiss vote down proposal for massive 'climate fund'

Environmental groups sue Trump administration over scrapped climate rule

ROBO SPACE
US labs map liquid metal path to future fusion power plants

Simulations reveal how plasma flow steers fusion reactor exhaust

Deep learning model tracks EV battery health with high precision

UCSB scientists bottle the sun with liquid battery

ROBO SPACE
Indonesia landfill collapse kills four

Pollution exposure linked to mental health problems: EU agency

Malaysia renews Lynas licence despite waste concerns

Global talks on plastic pollution treaty were 'constructive': source

ROBO SPACE
Gulf countries risk revenues, reputations in Middle East war

Bangladesh rations fuel as Mideast war deepens energy crunch

Ships brandish China-links to weave through Strait of Hormuz; France, allies preparing bid to 'gradually' reopen chokepoint

Eco friendly quantum dots reach record solar hydrogen output

ROBO SPACE
Curiosity Blog, Sols 4798-4803: Back for More Science

Mars relay orbiter seen as backbone for future exploration

UAE extends Mars probe mission until 2028

Mars' 'Young' Volcanoes Were More Complex Than Scientists Once Thought

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2026 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.