Engineers from the universities of Sheffield and Sussex are
planning on scanning the brains of bees and uploading them into
autonomous flying robots that will then fly and act like the real
thing.
Bionic bees -- or perhaps that should be "beeonic" -- could, it
is hoped, be used for a range of situations where tiny thinking
flying machines should be more useful than current technology,
which might mean seeking out gas or chemical leaks, or people who
are trapped in small spaces. They might even help pollinate
plants in places where natural bee populations have fallen due to
the still-mysterious
Colony Collapse Disorder.
It's important to note that this won't be an entirely
comprehensive model of a bee's brain -- it's only going to be the
parts associated with its sense of smell and vision. These modules
will be melded with other software to form what the team call a "
Green Brain", one that can react to new situations and
improvise rapidly just like a "real" animal or insect brain.
The project has been funded by the Engineering and
Physical Sciences Research Council with a £1m grant, with Nvidia
providing some of its top-end graphics processors for the
development team to work with. The aim is to get the "cybee" flying
by 2015.
The head of project, Dr John Marshall,
said: "Not only will this pave the way for many
future advances in autonomous flying robots, but we also believe
the computer modelling techniques we will be using will be widely
useful to other brain modelling and computational neuroscience
projects".
The prospect of a robotic animal that's as mentally
capable as the thing it's trying to mimic might seem exciting, but
bear in mind that swatting one of these away might prove a little
trickier. That's especially pertinent as
recent research has indicated that many insects, including
bees, have personalities like vertebrates -- let's hope they upload
a relatively laid-back bee's brain, lest it go
rogue.
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