(Press-News.org) Penn Engineers have developed a system that lets robots see around corners using radio waves processed by AI, a capability that could improve the safety and performance of driverless cars as well as robots operating in cluttered indoor settings like warehouses and factories.
The system, called HoloRadar, enables robots to reconstruct three-dimensional scenes outside their direct line of sight, such as pedestrians rounding a corner. Unlike previous approaches to non-line-of-sight (NLOS) perception that rely on visible light, HoloRadar works reliably in darkness and under variable lighting conditions.
“Robots and autonomous vehicles need to see beyond what’s directly in front of them,” says Mingmin Zhao, Assistant Professor in Computer and Information Science (CIS) and senior author of a paper describing HoloRadar, presented at the 39th annual Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS). “This capability is essential to help robots and autonomous vehicles make safer decisions in real time.”
Turning Walls Into Mirrors
At the heart of HoloRadar is a counterintuitive insight into radio waves. Compared to visible light, radio signals have much longer wavelengths, a property traditionally seen as a disadvantage for imaging because it limits resolution. Zhao’s team realized that, for peering around corners, those longer wavelengths are actually an advantage.
“Because radio waves are so much larger than the tiny surface variations in walls,” says Haowen Lai, a doctoral student in CIS and co-author of the new paper, “those surfaces effectively become mirrors that reflect radio signals in predictable ways.”
In practical terms, this means that flat surfaces like walls, floors and ceilings can bounce radio signals around corners, carrying information about hidden spaces back to a robot. HoloRadar captures these reflections and reconstructs what lies beyond direct view.
“It’s similar to how human drivers sometimes rely on mirrors stationed at blind intersections,” says Lai. “Because HoloRadar uses radio waves, the environment itself becomes full of mirrors, without actually having to change the environment.”
Designed for In-the-Wild Operations
In recent years, other researchers have demonstrated systems with similar capabilities, typically by using visible light. Those systems analyze shadows or indirect reflections, making them highly dependent on lighting conditions. Other attempts to use radio signals have relied on slow and bulky scanning equipment, limiting real-world applications.
“HoloRadar is designed to work in the kinds of environments robots actually operate in,” says Zhao. “This system is mobile, runs in real time and doesn’t depend on controlled lighting.”
HoloRadar augments the safety of autonomous robots by complementing existing sensors rather than replacing them. While autonomous vehicles already use LiDAR, a sensing system that uses lasers to detect objects in the vehicles’ direct line of sight, HoloRadar adds an additional layer of perception by revealing what those sensors cannot see, giving machines more time to react to potential hazards.
Processing Radio With AI
A single radio pulse can bounce multiple times before returning to the sensor, creating a tangled set of reflections that are difficult to untangle using traditional signal-processing methods alone.
To solve this problem, the team developed a custom AI system that combines machine learning with physics-based modeling. In the first stage, the system enhances the resolution of raw radio signals and identifies multiple “returns” corresponding to different reflection paths. In the second stage, the system uses a physics-guided model to trace those reflections backward, undoing the mirror-like effects of the environment and reconstructing the actual 3D scene.
“In some sense, the challenge is similar to walking into a room full of mirrors,” says Zitong Lan, a doctoral student in Electrical and Systems Engineering (ESE) and co-author of the paper. “You see many copies of the same object reflected in different places, and the hard part is figuring out where things really are. Our system learns how to reverse that process in a physics-grounded way.”
By explicitly modeling how radio waves bounce off surfaces, the AI can distinguish between direct and indirect reflections and determine the correct physical locations of a variety of objects, including people.
From the Lab to the Real World
The researchers tested HoloRadar on a mobile robot in real indoor environments, including hallways and building corners. In these settings, the system successfully reconstructed walls, corridors and hidden human subjects located outside the robot’s line of sight.
Future work will explore outdoor scenarios, such as intersections and urban streets, where longer distances and more dynamic conditions introduce additional challenges.
“This is an important step toward giving robots a more complete understanding of their surroundings,” says Zhao. “Our long-term goal is to enable machines to operate safely and intelligently in the dynamic and complex environments humans navigate every day.”
This research was conducted in the Wireless, Audio, Vision and Electronics for Sensing (WAVES) Lab at the University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science, and was supported by the University of Pennsylvania.
END
Robots that can see around corners using radio signals and AI
Penn researchers developed HoloRadar, a system that reconstructs hidden 3D spaces beyond robots’ line of sight.
2026-02-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
A non-invasive therapeutic strategy for improving bone healing in aged patients
2026-02-11
Bone repair is a tightly coordinated biological process that relies on stem and progenitor cells to rebuild damaged bone tissue. In younger individuals, these cells rapidly differentiate into osteoblasts—the bone-forming cells that generate new mineralized tissue. With aging, however, this process slows dramatically. Clinicians have long observed that fractures in older adults heal more slowly and are often associated with impaired recovery; however, the molecular signals driving this decline have remained unclear. Understanding why bone regeneration falters with age is critical amid global population aging and rising fracture-related disability.
Against this backdrop, ...
Molecule found to drive skin cancer growth and evade immune detection
2026-02-11
A molecule that helps regulate gene activity has also been shown to drive skin cancer growth and tumors’ ability to evade attack by the body’s immune system, a new study shows.
Led by researchers at NYU Langone Health and its Perlmutter Cancer Center, the study showed that a key protein — the transcription factor HOXD13 — is essential to the blood vessel growth needed to fuel melanoma tumor cells with oxygen and nutrients. Transcription factors control the rate at which genetic instructions encoded in DNA build the proteins that make up bodily ...
Smokefree generation law could see English smoking prevalence drop below 5% decades earlier than expected
2026-02-11
New research, led by experts at the University of Nottingham, has found that smoking prevalence among 12 to 30-year-olds in England could drop below 5% decades earlier than expected, if the government progressively raises the age of tobacco sale.
With less than a year to go until the planned introduction of the “smokefree generation” law, researchers at the University have modelled the policy’s potential impact on smoking rates and health inequalities. The findings are published in the BMJ-owned journal Tobacco Control.
The proposed legislation, part of the Government’s Tobacco and Vapes ...
Heart disease risk factors appeared at younger age among South Asian adults in the U.S.
2026-02-11
Research Highlights:
South Asian adults begin developing risk factors for heart disease earlier—by their mid-40s—according to an analysis of data from two long-running health studies in the United States.
Despite healthier lifestyle/behaviors, such as higher diet quality, lower alcohol use and comparable exercise levels, South Asian adults were more likely to have high blood pressure and/or prediabetes or type 2 diabetes compared to white, Chinese and Hispanics adults of the same age.
At ...
Paralysis treatment heals lab-grown human spinal cord organoids
2026-02-11
Northwestern University scientists have developed the most advanced organoid model for human spinal cord injury to date.
In a new study, the research team used lab-grown human spinal cord organoids — miniature organs derived from stem cells — to model different types of spinal cord injuries and test a promising new regenerative therapy.
For the first time, the scientists demonstrated that human spinal cord organoids can accurately mimic the key effects of spinal cord injury, including ...
US South Asians face elevated heart risk at age 45 despite healthier habits
2026-02-11
By age 45, nearly one in three South Asian men had prediabetes; one in four had hypertension
South Asians were twice as likely to develop diabetes by age 55 compared to white adults
Their risk was elevated despite reporting healthier diets, lower alcohol use and comparable exercise habits
Study highlights need for earlier screening and culturally tailored care for South Asian adults
CHICAGO --- South Asian adults in the U.S. report doing many of the right things for heart health, yet they show significantly higher rates of prediabetes, diabetes and hypertension than white and Chinese adults, and higher than or roughly similar ...
DNA barcoding reveals the complexity of breast cancer liquid biopsies
2026-02-11
Australian scientists have discovered that DNA barcoding can be used to track cancer cells in solid and liquid biopsies, empowering future research into more reliable breast cancer diagnosis and treatment strategies.
Tumours are composed of different cancer cells that vary in their aggressiveness and sensitivity to treatments, and further research is needed to understand how solid biopsies (from the tumour), or liquid biopsies (from the blood), can capture this diversity.
DNA barcoding technology is a powerful tool to study cancer heterogeneity using lentiviruses to label individual cancer cells with DNA ...
Flagship whales facing climate-driven decline in Australia
2026-02-11
The tide has turned on the conservation success story of the southern right whale.
Once considered a global conservation success story, the species is now emerging as a warning signal of how climate change is impacting threatened marine life, according to new research led by scientists from Flinders University and Curtin University with international collaborators in the US and South Africa.
Southern right whales (Eubalaena australis), a sentinel species for climate change, provide critical insight into ecosystem changes occurring in the Southern Ocean, warn the marine mammal experts.
In ...
Does a past abortion or miscarriage affect a woman’s risk of developing breast cancer?
2026-02-11
A prior abortion or miscarriage was not linked with an increased risk of developing pre- or postmenopausal breast cancer in a study published in Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica.
In the nationwide Finnish registry-based study, investigators analyzed data on 31,687 women with breast cancer diagnosed in 1972–2021 and 158,433 women without breast cancer.
The risk of breast cancer was the similar among women with a history of induced abortion and women with no history of abortion, both before and after 50 years of age. Risks were also similar among women with ...
Could a treatment redirect the body’s anti-viral immune response to target cancer cells?
2026-02-11
Because many different types of cancer cells overexpress programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), this cell surface protein is a major target of cancer immunotherapy. Unfortunately, drugs that target it do not trigger especially strong anti-cancer immune responses. New research published in Advanced Science reveals a promising strategy that harnesses pre-existing antiviral immunity to boost anti-tumor responses.
Researchers engineered what they call a PD-L1-binding antigen presenter (PBAP) that functions as a molecular bridge between tumor cells and immune cells. The construct fuses a protein segment ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Keeping an eagle eye on carbon stored in the ocean
FAU study: Tiny worm offers clues to combat chemotherapy neurotoxicity
The ACMG Foundation 2026 Early Career Travel Award is presented to Bianca Seminotti, Ph.D.
Rural cancer patients do just as well when having surgery close to home
New biosensor technology could improve glucose monitoring
Successful press conference for Special Issue II of the JSE Himalayas Series
Hair extensions contain many more dangerous chemicals than previously thought
Elevated lead levels could flow from some US drinking water kiosks
Fragile X study uncovers brainwave biomarker bridging humans and mice
Robots that can see around corners using radio signals and AI
A non-invasive therapeutic strategy for improving bone healing in aged patients
Molecule found to drive skin cancer growth and evade immune detection
Smokefree generation law could see English smoking prevalence drop below 5% decades earlier than expected
Heart disease risk factors appeared at younger age among South Asian adults in the U.S.
Paralysis treatment heals lab-grown human spinal cord organoids
US South Asians face elevated heart risk at age 45 despite healthier habits
DNA barcoding reveals the complexity of breast cancer liquid biopsies
Flagship whales facing climate-driven decline in Australia
Does a past abortion or miscarriage affect a woman’s risk of developing breast cancer?
Could a treatment redirect the body’s anti-viral immune response to target cancer cells?
How does universal, free prescription drug coverage affect older adults’ finances and behaviors?
Do certain factors affect life expectancy in people with spina bifida?
New study: Routine aspirin therapy prevents severe preeclampsia in at-risk populations
Afraid of chemistry at school? It’s not all the subject’s fault
How tech-dependency and pandemic isolation have created ‘anxious generation’
Nearly three quarters of US baby foods are ultra-processed, new study finds
Nonablative radiofrequency may improve sexual function in postmenopausal women
Pulsed dynamic water electrolysis: Mass transfer enhancement, microenvironment regulation, and hydrogen production optimization
Coordination thermodynamic control of magnetic domain configuration evolution toward low‑frequency electromagnetic attenuation
High‑density 1D ionic wire arrays for osmotic energy conversion
[Press-News.org] Robots that can see around corners using radio signals and AIPenn researchers developed HoloRadar, a system that reconstructs hidden 3D spaces beyond robots’ line of sight.