Inrobics Participates in the presentation of Scale Lab's Social Robotics and AI Catalogue: Social Robotics applied to health

Inrobics, present at a key meeting for applied social robotics

El February 12th 2026, Scale Lab presented the Catalog of Technological Offer in Useful Robotics, Social Robotics and Artificial Intelligence, an initiative aimed at promoting technology transfer and connecting innovation, industry and real adoption.

To InrobicsParticipating in activities dedicated to social robotics applied to health is especially relevant: social robotics and artificial intelligence are entering a stage where innovation is no longer enough, but is essential demonstrate usefulness, facilitate implementation, and build trust in environments where the impact is tangible: health, social and healthcare sector and education.

What the catalogue highlights: growth and maturity of the sector

The catalog reflects a clear trend: social robotics is experiencing a moment of expansion in terms of innovation and consolidation.

Among the most relevant data in the report, it is noted that, among 2021 and 2025, have been registered over 675 patent family applications in the field of social robotics, and have granted 330 patents during that same period. This context points to a sector that is evolving towards more mature solutions, with a greater focus on real and scalable applications.

Beyond the volume, the value lies in what it implies for the market: a growing ecosystem where it is becoming increasingly important To differentiate itself through usefulness, evidence, user experience, and deployability.

Opportunities for Europe: specialization in healthcare and public uses

International analysis reflects Asia's global leadership in activity volume, but also reveals a significant opportunity for Europe: Specialize in applications aligned with ethical, regulatory, and public service frameworks.

For companies developing technology applied to care and support, this opens up a unique path: building solutions that are not only innovative, but also implementable, safe and accepted by professionals, entities and users.

Involvement Inrobics at the presentation table

During the day, Inrobics He participated in the discussion and debate on challenges and opportunities in the sector. Our CEO spoke on behalf of the company. Jose Carlos Pulidoproviding a perspective based on the practical experience of starting and growing in the healthcare sector with an emerging technology.

The intervention of José Carlos Pulido: origin, challenges and evolution in 5 years

In his speech, Pulido shared three main ideas that connect directly with the current state of the sector:

1) From research to market reality

Inrobics It originated from research and technology transfer. Turning that knowledge into a useful product involves a complex leap: moving from "potential" to a proposal that fits into the daily lives of professionals and users.

2) Starting a business in healthcare when the device is “unknown”

The healthcare sector doesn't just demand innovation: it demands security, rigor, validation and trustWhen we also talk about a device that is unusual in traditional circuits, the challenge multiplies: it requires pedagogy, support, integration with real processes and a long-term vision.

3) Five years of evolution: from the beginning to consolidation

Pulido reviewed the company's journey from its creation to the present day, highlighting how the evolution of Inrobics It has been built step by step: learning with professionals, constant iteration, focus on utility and sustained growth in a demanding environment.

These types of spaces highlight something that in Inrobics We are clear on this: the impact doesn't happen when a technology exists, but when is adoptedIt integrates and adds value consistently.

Why this catalogue matters to the health and social care sector

For those working in rehabilitation, care, and active aging, social robotics and AI represent a concrete opportunity if they are properly focused:

  • Improve adherence and motivation in long processes.

  • Increase autonomy in guided activities.

  • Support the professional with tools that complement their work.

  • Facilitate continuity between sessions and contexts (center and home).

  • Measure and adapt with greater precision, when the model allows it.

The catalog reinforces the idea that the sector is moving towards useful solutions, with potential for institutional adoption and with a real track record in healthcare services.

You can read it in full here.


Commitment InrobicsTechnology focused on people and professionals

From Inrobics We appreciate the invitation and the opportunity to participate in a presentation that fosters dialogue between innovation and adoption. We continue working to ensure that social robotics and artificial intelligence become a real support for professionals and users, with a clear vision: to make technology more accessible, more human, and more useful.

If you want to learn how we apply social robotics and AI in health and social care settings, contact We'll work with your team and tell you about cases and implementation possibilities.

Image by Ana Albendea

Ana Albendea

Journalist and audiovisual communicator from the Rey Juan Carlos University of Madrid, she has a career in the press and online media (culture and technology). She specialized in Corporate Communication and Advertising through a Master's degree at the Complutense University of Madrid. Since 2021, she has been researching and creating content on technology, artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics. She adapts her experience and knowledge in the AI ​​​​sector by applying it to the health sector and its professional audiences. Her commitment and admiration for storytelling stands out, with the common thread of her current professional career being to make known the potential of robotics, more specifically social robotics in the health sector. Creativity to promote and communicate the work of the company, which is none other than to improve the quality of life of people, generating a positive impact on society.
Image by Ana Albendea

Ana Albendea

Journalist and audiovisual communicator from the Rey Juan Carlos University of Madrid, she has a career in the press and online media (culture and technology). She specialized in Corporate Communication and Advertising through a Master's degree at the Complutense University of Madrid. Since 2021, she has been researching and creating content on technology, artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics. She adapts her experience and knowledge in the AI ​​​​sector by applying it to the health sector and its professional audiences. Her commitment and admiration for storytelling stands out, with the common thread of her current professional career being to make known the potential of robotics, more specifically social robotics in the health sector. Creativity to promote and communicate the work of the company, which is none other than to improve the quality of life of people, generating a positive impact on society.