For the first time scientists have shown it is possible to control
insects, making them walk and even fly on demand
2:54PM BST 30 Mar 2016
It might sound the stuff of nightmares, but giant cyborg beetles could
soon be winging their way to a town near you, after scientists proved they can
wire up insects and control them remotely.
Several labs across the world are trying to design robot insect swarms
because the creatures are good at getting into nooks and crannies so could
quickly locate earthquake survivors in piles of rubble, carry out
surveillance or eavesdrop on criminals or terrorists.
But engineers at Nanyang
Technological University in Singapore
and the University of
California Berkley have gone one step further. Instead of creating
robots that move like insects they have shown it is possible to control the
actual insects themselves.
Using electrodes and tiny electronic backpacks the team have shown it
is possible to develop a living machine whose flight and walking gait can be
wirelessly controlled. The ‘biobots’ could even replace drones as they would be
far more agile and need no engineering to keep them in the air.
Writing in the journal Royal Society Inferface the authors said:
"Unlike man-made legged robots for which lots of tiny parts, sensors and
actuators are manufactured, assembled and integrated, the insect–computer
hybrid robots directly use living insects as nature’s ready-made robot platforms."
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