PaXini Tech, a developer of high-precision tactile sensing technologies and embodied intelligence infrastructure, said it would exhibit at CES 2026 in Las Vegas, as companies race to give robots more human-like perception and dexterity.
The company will use the technology show, which runs from 6th–9th January 2026, to present its full-stack embodied intelligence portfolio, spanning tactile sensors, dexterous robotic hands, humanoid robots, and omni-modal training datasets.
Founded by researchers from the Sugano Laboratory at Waseda University in Japan, a group widely regarded as the birthplace of the world’s first humanoid robot, PaXini positions itself at the intersection of robotics and artificial intelligence. The company says its goal is to enable AI systems to better understand and interact with the physical world.
Central to that ambition are PaXini’s tactile sensors, which it says can detect forces with a resolution of 0.01 newtons across their full measurement range. The sensors capture up to 15 dimensions of tactile data, including six-axis force, texture, and material resilience, capabilities designed to approximate aspects of human touch. With a starting price of US$49, PaXini is seeking to lower the cost barrier to advanced tactile sensing for developers of embodied AI systems.
Beyond sensors, the group has built a broader product matrix that includes the DexH13 dexterous hand, the TORA-ONE and TORA-DOUBLE ONE humanoid robots, and its OmniSharing DB, an omni-modal embodied intelligence dataset intended for training and evaluation.
PaXini said shipments of its tactile sensors had reached industry-leading volumes, with applications ranging from precision manufacturing and automotive assembly to logistics, retail, smart homes, and healthcare.