ROBOTICS
SCIENTISTS TURNING TO BUGS:
Forget the Humanoid
C3PO from `STAR WARS', Cockroaches make better models.
Maine Sunday
Telegram / Portland Press Herald, May 31, 1998 Page: 1B © 1998
Guy Gannett Communications By Eric Blom, Staff Writer
(Note: This is the text from the article above)
Carl
Spirito studies creepy-crawly things like cockroaches, crabs, spiders
and crayfish - a fact that made him popular at theUniversity of Genoa
robotics lab during his six-month sabbatical there. The Italian engineers,
who were building a six-legged robot, peppered Spirito with questions
about how bugs move and how they sense the world. They knew Spirito's
critters could help them build a better machine.
Lowly forms of life have become a hot topic
in robotics. Many engineers now see bugs and beasts as easier to copy
than humans, and as potentially superior models of behavior. Biological
scientists, meanwhile, are starting to pay attention to robots as powerful
models for studying insect and animal life.``Certainly, the boundaries
are getting very blurred'' between robotics and the natural sciences,
said Spirito, an associate professor of physiology at the University of
New England in Biddeford. ``There's this group of us who want to use robots
to understand animals, and there are those who want to use animals to
understand robotics,'' he said.
This academic partnership - broadly called
"biologically-inspired robotics'' - has implications for everyone.
Proponents say it may soon lead to new consumer, industrial and military
robots - things like robot vacuum cleaners, lawn mowers, cooks, dusting
machines and soldiers. And it is helping science better understand living
creatures.
Biologically-inspired robotics
also is raising ethical and philosophical issues. Some observers say it
is blurring the definition of life itself - as robots are taught to feed
themselves, fight for survival, learn from their environment and, in some
cases, reproduce and evolve. ``Really, we're on the cusp of the next technological
revolution,'' said Scott Jantz, a doctoral candidate at the University
of Florida Machine Intelligence Laboratory. The lab has built 30 insect-inspired
robots and a prototype robot lawn mower. ``It'll make the (personal computer)
revolution look like small potatoes,'' Jantz said. ``You only have one
PC in your home, but you could easily have four or five robots in your
home, involved in your daily life.'' The collaboration between engineers
and natural scientists is a relatively new development.
Randall Beer, an associate professor of
biology and computer science at Case Western Reserve in Cleveland, compares
it to peeking at an answer in the back of the textbook. Nature has already
solved many of the problems robots confront. ``It's silly to ignore these
real-world examples,'' Beer said. ``Many of the things we'd like to do
with robots are done by animals as well as by humans.'' Engineers now
regularly look at how people and animals walk, shifting weight from limb
to limb and altering their gait with the terrain. They create artificial
spinal cords, muscles, nervous systems and bodies for robots based on
animal models. They even write computer programs to mimic the decision-making
process of animals and people. Biological modeling is particularly important
as robotics tries to overcome its biggest hurdle: developing machines
that work outside the laboratory. ``Animals really have the same problem
as robots,'' Beer said. ``They don't have people walking around after
them, picking things up and helping them out of jams.''
Still, until very recently, robotics mostly
focused on humans for whatever biological inspiration it gleaned from
the natural world. When engineers and America's popular culture envisioned
robots, they thought of humanoid devices in the style of C3-PO from ``Star
Wars'' or Will Robinson's friend on ``Lost in Space.'' ``They thought
that if they could come up with a machine with reasoning ability, everything
else would be trivial,'' Spirito said. But experience demonstrated that
not only were human brains difficult to copy, but the physical skills
of people are hard to duplicate as well.
Setting sights lower: So in
recent years, many robotics engineers have started to set their sights
lower - all the way down to the world of insects and other invertebrates.
Now robots frequently look more like the spider in ``Charlotte's Web''
than the android on ``Star Trek.'' For example, Beer is part of a team
that is building a robot cockroach - 17 times as large as the real insect
- that ``has got enough strength to run and whatnot.'' ``That's the level
of computer intelligence we have available to us now,'' Jantz said of
insects and other creatures at the bottom of the food chain. Bug-bots
may not be smart, but they can be superior in some physical respects to
humans. They get around with more stability, for example, on eight legs
than people do on two. And their mechanical bodies can be more durable,
powerful and responsive than flesh.
Richard Peck of Newport is building a six-legged
robot as his senior project at the University of Maine. He chose that
model because of its relative simplicity and functionality. ``You have
got a lot more stability if you have four legs on the ground at any time,''
Peck said. Researchers in Massachusetts are using lobsters' superior ability
to detect odors as a model for their robot, which will identify or track
down chemical spills. They call it Robo-Lobster. A Yale professor is using
the sound waves produced by bats and dolphins as a model for creating
robots that can ``see'' in three dimensions, rather than just the two
dimensions available to humans. Researchers in several locations are showing
how even high-level activities can be performed by robot bugs taught to
interact with each other in a kind of artificial-insect society. ``What
evolves out of that society (of insects interacting together) is a very
high level of function,'' Jantz said. ``Ants can farm. They can do all
kinds of things that we associate with humans.'' This insect model is
a more realistic picture of how robots might really be used in our lives
than the science fiction ideal of helpful, humanoid machines.
Doing jobs people shun: ``You
don't want to put doctors or lawyers out of business,'' Jantz said. ``You
need robots for the jobs that people don't want to do. Those are the robots
that will be really valuable.'' You want robots to take out the trash,
defuse bombs, handle toxic waste and demolish nuclear power plants. Some
insects have shown that they can thrive in environments like these without
complaint. ``Between the 1960s and the 1980s, the artificial intelligence
field had these lofty goals of creating human-type intelligence,'' Jantz
said. ``That goal was more academic than practical because you don't want
robots thinking for themselves. ``You don't want them thinking `Do I really
want to go to the bottom of a volcano?' '' he said. Also, insect-inspired
robots would be a lot cheaper to produce than people-like machines, and
thus more useful in the real world. ``You turn loose 500 of these autonomous
cockroaches, and if two or three of them stop working in the first couple
of days or hit a wall or whatever, it's no big deal,'' Spirito said. ``People
aren't thinking about the perfect robot anymore.''
Indeed, researchers at Vanderbilt University
in Nashville are designing robot insects that will crawl and fly for the
military. Soldiers on battlefields and pilots in the sky would release
``swarms'' of these robo-insects - each about a third the size of a credit
card - to spy on the enemy and detect the presence of chemical or biological
weapons. And this kind of mechanical creature is just the beginning of
what biologically inspired robots could accomplish. Scientists can take
lessons from bug-bots and move up the line to more complicated animals
such as reptiles, mammals and people. In fact, the robots can help. They
now often ``evolve'' in the same way that biological creatures do in the
natural world, Jantz said. It's called ``emergent functionality'' among
robotics engineers. For example, Jantz programmed several robots to recharge
themselves from a specific electrical outlet and set them down in the
same room.
Survival of the fittest: ``Without
even programming it in, the robots would fight for this resource and kill
each other off,'' Jantz said. ``The strongest one survives.'' This kind
of so-called ``artificial evolution'' will help scientists develop higher
level robots - maybe even approaching the human level - by learning from
the experiences of these lower-level forms of ``artificial life,'' Jantz
said. However, there will always be a role for robotic insects and animals
in the future, he said. ``The view of Rosie in `The Jetsons' won't happen,
not for technological issues but because of civil rights issues,'' Jantz
said. ``You can't enslave a higher-intelligence being in your home.''
Staff photo by John Ewing
PHOTO Caption: Carl Spirito, an associate professor of physiology at the
University of New England in Biddeford, Maine, is interested in how robots
can be built to simulate bugs' motions.
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