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We are pleased to announce that Neuronaix has been featured in La Provence, in an article by journalist Ariane L’Homme published on 23 April 2026. The profile traces our mission from Marignane: teaching industrial robots the gestures of operators directly, in order to accelerate robotisation in sectors where it remains slow and costly to deploy today.

The article highlights the break that imitation learning represents compared with conventional programming methods. In industries such as aerospace, defence, and nuclear, production volumes are lower and situations more variable, making it hard to amortise months of development. Neuronaix’s approach relies on artificial intelligence models trained locally from vision, motion, and force data. The robot reproduces the operator’s gesture in real time and adapts when an anomaly occurs. All processing is performed on site, without internet connectivity, to preserve industrial confidentiality.

La Provence also underlines the human dimension of the project. “We capture human know-how in order to pass it on. The idea is to upskill operators, not to push them aside,” explains Clément Busuttil, founder of Neuronaix. The article names Airbus Helicopters in Marignane among our first customers, alongside VINCI, which has taken a stake in Neuronaix and is supporting new use cases, particularly in construction. Incubated at the Belle de Mai Incubator and recently named winner of the Tech for Future 2026 Industry Prize, the company is targeting 150,000 euros in revenue in 2026 and plans to accelerate hiring.

We thank Ariane L’Homme and the La Provence editorial team for this coverage. It encourages us to continue our mission alongside industrial partners in France and abroad, with the conviction that the future of robotics depends on a better understanding of human gestures.

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