Scientists create cyborg cockroaches controlled by solar-powered backpacks
The first thing to know about the Madagascar hissing cockroach, a black and brown invertebrate as long as an index finger, is that it lives up to its name. When threatened, it makes a hissing sound by rapidly passing air through holes in its back. The result is a sound similar to the rattle of a snake’s tail. Weird but cool.
The second thing to know about the Madagascar hissing cockroach is that scientists used it to create insect cyborgs. This cyborg could one day be used to monitor the environment or aid in search and rescue efforts in cities after natural disasters. Also strange. Also cool.
A new study published Monday in the journal npj Flexible Electronics reveals that an international team of researchers has designed a system to remotely control the legs of cockroaches from a distance.
Essentially a cockroach backpack wired to the cockroach’s nervous system, the system has about 50 times the power output of previous devices and is built with ultra-thin, flexible solar cells that do not hinder the cockroach’s movements. It has been. Pressing a button sends an impulse to the backpack, tricking the cockroach into moving in a particular direction.
Please explain if you’re mad
Rise of Robo-cockroaches
Cockroach cyborgs are not a new idea. Back in 2012, researchers at North Carolina State University conducted the following experiment. Madagascar cockroach and wireless backpackshowing that the creature can be remotely controlled to walk along the track.
The way scientists do this is by attaching a backpack and connecting wires to the cockroach’s “cerci,” two appendages that are basically sensory nerves at the end of its abdomen. One on the left, one on the right. Previous research has shown that electrical impulses to either side can stimulate cockroaches to move in that direction, giving researchers some control over locomotion.
However, in order to send and receive signals, the backpack must be powered. A battery can also be used, but eventually the battery will die, leaving Cyborg his roach free to vanish into the fallen leaves.
The RIKEN team built the system so that it can be charged with solar power. They attached a battery and stimulation module to the cockroach’s thorax (upper body). That was the first step. The second step was to ensure that the solar module attached to the cockroach’s lower body, the cockroach’s abdomen.
Humans have figured out how to best wear a rucksack, but it’s not quite the same for insects. For example, the segmented nature of the roach’s abdomen allows it to contort or flip over if it finds itself in a hairy situation. Slapping a sticky backpack or charging cell restricts its movement and renders it inoperable.
To overcome this, the RIKEN team tested a number of thin electronic films and performed a series of experiments on cockroaches to see how the cockroaches behaved according to the thickness of the film. This helped determine a module about 1/17th the thickness of a human hair. It attached to the abdomen without significantly restricting the roach’s freedom of movement and stayed on for about a month, significantly longer than previous systems.
Now for the fun part (I guess): insect remote control.
In a series of experiments, the team demonstrated that the system could steer cockroaches as desired via a radio system. You can see it above.
And for now, that’s as far as they have.
“Current systems only have wireless mobility control systems, which are not sufficient to prepare applications such as urban rescue,” said Kenjiro Fukuda, an expert in flexible electronics at Riken in Japan. . “By integrating other necessary devices such as sensors and cameras, cyborg insects can be used for such purposes.”
Fukuda points out that cameras will likely need more power, but there are sensors that use very little power that can be integrated into today’s systems. Even if you could use the camera, it’s likely very low resolution.
In particular, the ultra-thin solar cell design makes it possible to apply it to other insects, says Fukuda. Beetles and cicadas are potential candidates.
Insect robots are having a little time. In July, researchers at Rice University unveiled Necrobot, a spider. It’s a hybrid of insect and machine, and has developed the creepiest claw machine in the world.
But those spiders were dead. Cockroaches are not.
I have to admit that I felt a strange pain when I saw the image of Robo Roach crawling in a certain direction… Guilt. Or something like that, perhaps. Creepy Crawler understood that his legs were being steered against his will, and wondered if this process was painful. Cockroaches don’t feel pain,” says Fukuda. Phew.
In recent years, however, there have been several studies that have examined how insects experience emotional states, and a debate about the ethical implications of such studies. , and points out that there is still a lack of understanding of insect consciousness.