When desert snakes encounter an
obstacle, they bounce off the barrier and change direction like light waves.
The s-shape slithering of a snake
is a familiar sight, and researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology examined
this sinusoidal wave-like movement to better understand how limbless snakes
deal with obstacles they can’t see.
After setting up a test arena on
shag carpet to mimic the sandy conditions of a desert, the researchers observed
snakes as they slithered through a set of six pegs to determine how the snake
interacted with obstacles.
The team found that the snake
moved similarly to light waves after diffracting or bouncing off of an obstacle
and separating into separate beams of light.
A snake will not deliberately
change course if it encounters an obstacle but instead passively bend with the
obstacle and shift direction.
“The idea behind passive dynamics
is that there are waveform shape changes being made by the animal that are
driven entirely by the passive properties of their bodies,” said Perrin
Schiebel, the lead author of the study. “Instead of sending a signal to
activate a muscle, the interaction of the snakes’ bodies with the external
environment is what causes the shape change. The forces of the obstacles are
pushing the snake bodies into a new shape.”
The researchers recorded 253
snake trips to determine and model a pattern in the snakes’ movements.
The snakes were released one and
time and temporarily blindfolded using harmless face paint, and for each trip,
the researchers nudged the snakes through the pegs. When the snake encountered
a peg, it didn’t move in a straight line but continued through the shag carpet
in a waveform, exiting the pegs at a different angle.
“When we put the snakes down in
the arena, they started moving using the same waveform they use on desert
sand,” said Schiebel. “They would then encounter the dowel grating, pass
through it, and continue on the other side still using that waveform.”
Modeling the snake’s patterns
illustrated how the pegs scattered the snake’s movements.
“We think the snake is
essentially operating in a model that control engineers would consider ‘open
loop,’” said Daniel Goldman, a member of the research team. “It is setting a
particular motor program on its body, which generates the characteristic wave
pattern, and when it collides with the obstacle, its body mechanics allow it to
deform and move the posts without degrading its speed.”
The results, published in the
journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, could have important
implications for improving autonomous robots designed
to move through complex environments.
“One problem with robots moving
in the real world is that we don’t yet have principles by which we can
understand how best to control these robots on granular surfaces like sand,
leaf litter, rubble or grass,” said Goldman. “The point of this study was to
try to understand how limbless locomotors, which have long bodies that can bend
in interesting ways using potentially complicated neuromechanical control
schemes, manage to move through complicated terrain.”
The researchers say the engineers
could use the passive movements of snakes to develop snake-like robots that can
easily maneuver through obstacles.
“We think that our discoveries of
the role of passive dynamics in the snake can facilitate new snake robot
designs that will enable them to move through complex environments more
fluidly,” said Goldman. “The goal would be to build search and rescue robots
that can get into these complex environments and help first responders.”
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