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China’s humanoid robot boom creates wave of data‑driven jobs

China

China

China

China’s humanoid robot boom creates wave of data‑driven jobs

2026-05-04 16:35 Last Updated At:05-05 11:56

Humanoid robots are spreading across China, fueling demand for data-driven jobs such as collectors and auditors, with national training bases already logging more than 20 million entries.

In east China’s Jiangsu Province, a data training center has enlisted young collectors equipped with sensors to coach robots into becoming "workers".

"The scene I'm working on right now involves the arrangement of tableware—some of the most basic tasks for a restaurant server," said Xu Yinsong, a robot data collector.

By repeating simple movements across different positions tens of thousands of times, collectors compile the extensive information that trains humanoid robots.

The latest training devices, fitted with over 3,000 contact points, record 80 dimensions of information such as hardness, softness and surface texture, boosting robots’ perception and action planning.

"Traditional data collection relies on humans remotely controlling robots, which is inefficient and expensive, and lacks tactile information - it merely mechanically repeats actions. Our device functions like nerve endings and human skin, collecting human's sensations from vision to touch throughout the entire process," explained Li Zhongzhi, the technical lead.

Partnering with Xu Yansong is Ye Shuai, who is tasked with verifying whether the collected actions qualify as usable training data.

"The data collected by our collectors isn't always 100 percent accurate. If the task requires the left hand but the collector uses the right hand or doesn't complete the action, we will judge it as incorrect. If the task is completed perfectly, we classify it as qualified data. In the end, we 'feed' both types of data to our humanoid robots. Like children learning, the robots will understand not just what is correct but also what is wrong," said Ye.

Currently, numerous real-world data collection bases are being established across the country. The national coordinated cluster has accumulated over 20 million pieces of localized data so far.

In the first four months of 2026 alone, more than eight million new pieces were added—an increase of over 120 percent compared to the same period last year. It is projected that China's humanoid robot market will reach 400 billion yuan in the next five years, creating over one million new jobs, including data collection technicians and robot swarm collaborative operators.

China’s humanoid robot boom creates wave of data‑driven jobs

China’s humanoid robot boom creates wave of data‑driven jobs

Crowds of music fans have been praised for their unified response after a medical emergency unfolded during a music festival in central China's Hubei Province on Sunday night, with some 20,000 revelers quickly parting to create a pathway for medics to transport a collapsed man to a waiting ambulance.

The heartwarming moment occurred on the streets of Jingzhou City, where a large number of people had gathered for a performance, when one of the attendees reportedly took unwell and fainted.

When the alarm was raised that the man was in need of medical assistance, the attentive crowd allowed emergency responders to come through and perform immediate first aid treatment on site, before a stretcher was brought to transport the man to a waiting ambulance.

In a remarkable scene, as seen in footage filmed from above, the crowds coordinated along with police and emergency personnel to separate and create a clear gap -- which some later referred to as a "life channel" -- for the collapsed man to be speedily carried through.

The actions of the crowds were hailed by local people and emergency workers in enabling the man to be on his way to hospital in the space of just three minutes.

"The entire process was very quick. Everyone was in totally sync when making this pathway for the man to come through," said Ding Yi, a local community worker.

"I ran through a small channel and quickly led the medical personnel to this location. When they were carrying out first aid, the stretcher arrived, and then they moved the patient to the ambulance. The whole process took no more than three minutes," said Pei Zhihong, a police officer, as he explained where the incident unfolded.

According to local police, the man is now out of danger and recovering well.

Massive crowd makes way to allow medics to treat, transport patient at music festival

Massive crowd makes way to allow medics to treat, transport patient at music festival

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