# Amazon's "Vulcan" Robot Feels Its Way Around Shelves

Amazon has introduced Vulcan, a warehouse automation system designed to handle delicate picking tasks through tactile sensing technology. The robot features a custom arm, spatula-like probe, and suction cup integrated with joint-embedded force-torque sensors. Machine-learning models interpret touch signals to guide motion planning and decision-making.

## Current Deployment The system is operational in Hamburg and Spokane facilities, where it retrieves items from bins. When faced with particularly challenging picks, Vulcan transfers the task to human workers rather than attempting risky maneuvers.

## Design Philosophy Engineers target approximately 75% automation while maintaining human workers in the workflow. This hybrid approach aims to enhance productivity without implementing fully automated "lights-out" warehouse operations.

## Industry Significance Dexterity has long represented a major limitation in robotic logistics. Successful implementation of tactile sensing could accelerate AI-driven fulfillment systems and eventually enable fine-grained manufacturing tasks requiring delicate manipulation. According to UC Berkeley roboticist Ken Goldberg, tactile technology is advancing rapidly, though achieving human-level sensitivity remains approximately a decade away.


Author: Dr. Hernani Costa — Founder of First AI Movers and Core Ventures. AI Architect, Strategic Advisor, and Fractional CTO helping Top Worldwide Innovation Companies navigate AI Innovations. PhD in Computational Linguistics, 25+ years in technology.

Originally published at First AI Movers under CC BY 4.0.