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    Roach-bots.

    By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID, AP Science Writer
    2 hours, 26 minutes ago

    WASHINGTON - Tiny robots programmed to act like roaches were able to blend into cockroach society, according to researchers studying the collective behavior of insects.

    Cockroaches tend to self-organize into leaderless groups, seeming to reach consensus on where to rest together.

    For example, when provided two similar shelters, most of the group tended to gather under the same one.

    Hoping to learn more about this behavior, researchers led by Jose Halloy at the Free University of Brussels, Belgium, designed small robots programmed to act like a cockroach.

    The robots didn't look like the insects and at first the roaches fled from them, but after the scientists coated the robots with pheromones that made them smell like roaches the machines were accepted into the group, nesting together with the insects.

    Given a choice, roaches generally prefer a darker place and the robots were programmed to do the same.

    When given a choice of a darker or lighter shelter, 75 percent of the cockroaches and 85 percent of the robots gathered under the darker one.

    Then, to see if the robots had really become part of society and could influence group decisions, Halloy and colleagues programmed them to prefer shelters with more light.

    The result, the lighter shelter was preferred by the mixed group 61 percent of the time, while the cockroaches alone picked it just 27 percent of the time.

    On the other hand, in 39 percent of cases the robots, despite being programmed to prefer a lighter shelter, joined the cockroaches under the darker one.

    The findings were reported in Friday's issue of the journal Science.
    We've finally engineered our own destruction.
    So you're a fish out of water...
    Keep swimming.
    What else can you do?

    #2
    Re: Roach-bots.

    Ugh, roaches.

    Sick. Kill em.

    Comment


      #3
      Re: Roach-bots.

      Whoa, that's seriously cool. I wonder why some of the robotic cockroaches took the dark environment and some took the light environment--was it a product of what they saw the other roaches doing?

      Next: let's make a robotic Weighted Companion Cube!


      How Badly Do You Want It? (VX Ace) is now available for download! - no outside software necessary.

      "I live and love in God's peculiar light." - Michelangelo

      Comment


        #4
        Re: Roach-bots.

        And how much of my tax dollars were put into discovering the secret life of roaches?

        Here I come Pav, like the Kool-Aid man barging into a funeral! Oh yeah!

        Comment


          #5
          Re: Roach-bots.

          That depends, how much tax do you pay in Brussels, Belgium?
          So you're a fish out of water...
          Keep swimming.
          What else can you do?

          Comment


            #6
            Re: Roach-bots.

            Oh, well none

            It doesnt say where the study was done
            Last edited by JPS; 11-16-2007, 03:59 PM.

            Here I come Pav, like the Kool-Aid man barging into a funeral! Oh yeah!

            Comment


              #7
              Re: Roach-bots.

              I saw video of it on the news. The robotic roaches looked more like toy cars and moved around nothing like a roach.

              Oh well, roaches can't even tell the difference.

              Comment


                #8
                Re: Roach-bots.



                More info
                http://www.time.com/time/health/arti...,00.html?imw=Y

                Here I come Pav, like the Kool-Aid man barging into a funeral! Oh yeah!

                Comment


                  #9
                  Re: Roach-bots.

                  Hopefully they'll be easier to kill than real roaches. Honestly, what we've learned from movies, we should just completely forget about robots...No sense in creating our own robot overlords.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Re: Roach-bots.

                    Wow the second to last line it says despite their programming they still went to the darker area. Damn disobedient cockroach robots!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Re: Roach-bots.

                      This is awesome. Of course, I can see that this research will inevitably be used to deter roaches from entering our homes... and instead enter the homes of enemy soldiers .

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Re: Roach-bots.

                        On the other hand, in 39 percent of cases the robots, despite being programmed to prefer a lighter shelter, joined the cockroaches under the darker one.
                        I think you guys are missing the point of the whole thing. It has nothing to do with roaches. The last bolded line is what the entire thing boils down to. If the robots were programmed one way, why would they go against their programming to choose darker? This is actually pretty damn scary.

                        Originally posted by Shard
                        We've finally engineered our own destruction.
                        I agree wholeheartedly with this sentiment.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Re: Roach-bots.

                          We's all guntoo DAIEEE!

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Re: Roach-bots.

                            Originally posted by Perversion View Post
                            I think you guys are missing the point of the whole thing. It has nothing to do with roaches. The last bolded line is what the entire thing boils down to. If the robots were programmed one way, why would they go against their programming to choose darker? This is actually pretty damn scary.
                            I'm not sure whether or not you're being facetious at all here... assuming you're not, this is actually the part of the study I found to be very cool and fascinating. Was the cockroach programmed so well that it could defect from its normally-preferred behavior based on what its fellows were doing?

                            EDIT: And if it WAS able to defect as such, can we please cast one of these guys for the next series of SURVIVOR?
                            Last edited by Wavelength; 11-17-2007, 02:18 AM.


                            How Badly Do You Want It? (VX Ace) is now available for download! - no outside software necessary.

                            "I live and love in God's peculiar light." - Michelangelo

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Re: Roach-bots.

                              I was not being facetious. I guess it all depends on the mathematics involved in the term, "preferring," but if the robots went against their programming almost 2/5 of the time, and possibly were able to "learn" in a rudimentary way, all this brings to mind is scary "Matrix" et al, inspired scenarios.

                              Comment

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