Controlling cyborg insects able to navigate unknown terrain using a swarm navigation algorithm – multiple application possibilities
Looking like a scene from Starship Troopers, insects swarm towards us across a barren desert. Although these are normal-sized Madagascar hissing cockroaches (Gromphadorhina portentosa) in a sand box, they have a secret in their backpacks which sounds like sci-fi. The insects are attached to microchips programmed to guide and coordinate a cyborg swarm. Inspired by “tourists who follow a tour leader”, algorithms steer the cockroach leader in the direction of a predefined goal with gentle bursts of electrical stimulation. With the cockroaches primed to follow their leader over and around obstacles, the approach could help to explore hazardous city areas during search and rescue missions, or even to plant seeds on a massive scale. But a different code might one day use remote controlled cyborg insects as tiny assistants in biomedical research – or even (gulp) to deliver drugs.
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