Cyborg: Difference between revisions

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It is a common misconception that cyborgs are another name for a robot, because some older films and TV shows have inaccurately portrayed androids or robots as cyborgs.  In actuality, a cyborg is not 100% machine.  It is part human, part machine.
It is a common misconception that cyborgs are another name for a robot, because some older films and TV shows have inaccurately portrayed androids or robots as cyborgs.  In actuality, a cyborg is not 100% machine.  It is part human, part machine.


==Notable examples of Cyborgs==
==In fiction==
*Jaime Sommers from [[The Bionic Woman]]
*Jaime Sommers from [[The Bionic Woman]]
*Certain [[Terminator]] models
*Certain [[Terminator]] models

Revision as of 18:40, 3 September 2013

Major Motoko Kusanagi from Ghost in the Shell is mostly robotic, with only a small part of her original brain remaining organic

A Cyborg is a hybrid human/robot with both organic and inorganic components. The term is a portmanteau of the words "cybernetic" and "organism".

In gynoid related fiction and media, a cyborg is typically a robot with both organic components in addition to machinery. More often than not, they are humans who died or were critically injured and fitted with cybernetic components, thus making them a cyborg.

It is a common misconception that cyborgs are another name for a robot, because some older films and TV shows have inaccurately portrayed androids or robots as cyborgs. In actuality, a cyborg is not 100% machine. It is part human, part machine.

In fiction

More examples

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