Cockroach-Like Robot to Help Explain Animal Movement 124
neutron_p writes "A cockroach-like robot named RHex is the starting point for a major project to understand animals' most distinguishing trait: how they move without falling over.
Researchers from several universities will focus on RHex, a short, six-legged robot that scampers like a cockroach, as a working model of the principles they're seeking to uncover. By tweaking the robot and using it as a physical model, they hope to tease apart the complex neural and muscular networks in insects."
Easy... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Easy... (Score:5, Informative)
The best way to study their movement is to mount railguns on them, and fire them at random, confusing the hell out of the little guys...don't believe me?
http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/205/18
Check out the picture!
Re:Easy... (Score:1)
Re:Easy... (Score:1)
Re:Easy... (Score:3, Funny)
How long (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How long (Score:3, Funny)
duh... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:duh... (Score:1)
I work on this... (Score:5, Insightful)
While the ability of the bot to go over hard terrain is amazing, the point is that your relinquish direct control.
The basic problem in perception is dealing with the drastic motions.
The computer vision methods needed are quite complicated, requiring complimenting sensors like inertial measurement devices. Also extremely wide-angle cameras are excellent because things stay in view, but difficult because the pin-hole model fails.
Go here for some work that is now a bit dated, from a 180degree camera strapped to rhex:
http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/projects/buzzard
Re:I work on this... (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.rhex.net/
look for the great video of the tumble from a pile of boulders, which doesn't seem to be a problem.
I wish I could see ASIMO take a fall like that...and watch the subsequent execution of the grad student who let it happen.
Re:Please learn how to make links. (Score:2)
i think exposing short links for transparency works better in short posts. Considering the domain is exposed anyway...
on my blog, the hundreds of links are all brightly colored words for yah
Re:I work on this... (Score:3, Interesting)
See, for example, the work of Mark Tilden
http://www.exhibitresearch.com/tilden/
Re:I work on this... (Score:5, Insightful)
As Brooks showed, you can get very complicated behavior from reactive or even semi-stateful robots. BUT, I would question the scalability to something more application specific and useful.
For instance, imagine such a bot making a sandwich, and then cleaning your toilette...
Also, as some point, you're going to want to give the bot an order, like go from A to B to C then back. Rhex would be unable to do that currently without a very engineered environment, which goes against the entire point of such a bot which moves skillfully in all environments.
Adding a robust perception loop around the sense-response robot is the way to go, as far as I'm concerned.
Re:I work on this... (Score:5, Interesting)
"Adding a robust perception loop around the sense-response robot is the way to go, as far as I'm concerned."
Agreed. In fact, that was one avenue the BEAM folks and Mark Tilden began exploring. Their take was to develop a solid sense-response sub-layer, and then layer on the computing systems.
The BEAM name for the architecture was Horse-Rider.
J Wolfgang Goerlich
Re:I work on this... (Score:3, Funny)
And be sure to imagine it completing those actions in exactly that order. No one's been able to teach good kitchen hygiene to cockroaches yet, be they 'bots or bugs.
Re:I work on this... (Score:3, Informative)
most poisons work because they touch them, and then clearn their feet constantly...
that said, they do carry disease
Re:I work on this... (Score:3, Interesting)
Part of repatition training for humans is to transform a computational movement into a reaction movement. If you repeat something enough, it eventually gets hardwired (my lower brain is an FPGA!?!) and you no longer have to think/compute about it.
I think a "tri-layer" approach is good, with a sense-response layer (step back - ouch, that's hot) deferring to a trained-response layer (walking) then to a computed-response layer (walking over a rock garden). And if you walk ove
Re:I work on this... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I work on this... (Score:3, Informative)
I saw a show on animal channel the other day that was about the fastest runners. Number one was the tiger beetle [ufl.edu]. What struck me is that the reason it runs in short bursts is that its perception system can't keep up with all the input. So it has to keep stopping to get its bearings. Roaches are very fast too, and they use this same method of short bursts and stops. (which has the added benefit of making them harder to stomp. :)
Anothe
Practical Applications (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe a mars rover that doesn't faller over or get stuck
There are lots of possible uses of data from this research.
Re:Practical Applications (Score:1)
such a device would be a good for battling genetically mutated human/arachnids that have been plaguing the cityscape lately...
This is good news (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This is good news (Score:2)
I, for one, welcome our new robotic cockroach overlords.
$30M for more insect robots? Sounds like pork. (Score:4, Insightful)
We realy should be doing better than this. We should at least have Aibo-type robots running (or at least trotting) over real terrain by now. It's embarassing.
The trouble with this insect stuff is that you can do crap work and get published. If you do work on robots that really balance, you look stupid if your control system doesn't work. Everyone can see you failed. With insect robots, failure is less obvious. Some people think this is a feature.
Re:$30M for more insect robots? Sounds like pork. (Score:3, Insightful)
and uh, what is the "we should have.." based on? wishes? according to scifi we should have flying cars, that however doesn't make them technically feasible(or possible at right price) at the moment.
Straight up (Score:2)
www.geocities.com/James_Sager_PA
Re:Straight up (Score:2)
Re:$30M for more insect robots? Sounds like pork. (Score:3, Interesting)
First spend tens of million studying insect motion. Then spend hundreds of millions researching motion of higher lifeforms. Then billions to develop a factory manufacturing system to make copies of moving animals.
Why?
Every year we generate many millions of the most perfect and adaptive biological being the world have ever seen... babies...humans. Yet most of them get nothing but shit and are doomed to live on a dollar a day for their ent
Re:$30M for more insect robots? Sounds like pork. (Score:3, Insightful)
Because if you send them to another planet they'll either explode (no atmosphere) or disolve (corrosive atmosphere).
And if you put them in spacesuits and send them there, they won't necessarily do what you tell them to.
robots in space? (Score:1)
Because if you send them to another planet they'll either explode (no atmosphere) or disolve (corrosive atmosphere).
Nobody's going to be sending anybody to other planets (outside of few stunts like the moon landings of the 1970s).
The only countries that have the technology and government structures to do anything even remotely like that are the USA, Russia, and China. Russia's bro
Re:robots in space? (Score:1, Insightful)
Yes, that's pretty much his point. It costs a huge amount to send a human onto another planet, so we can and do use robots. And I hardly think anyone predicting global environmental catastrophies in forty years should be making potshots at others for making broad predictions based on a little data and a lot of guesswork.
Re:robots in space? (Score:2)
Many people miss the point in the humans vs. robots in space debate. The underlining point is that there is no sense in spending tons of money to put anything on other planets. We have other more urgent priorities here. Interplanetary exploration is, deserves to be, and will remain science fiction for another 200-300 years. The initial space explorations of the 1960s were a historical fluke that is unlikely to b
Re:$30M for more insect robots? Sounds like pork. (Score:3, Informative)
-Colin [colingregorypalmer.net]
Biggest application: NASA (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think that's true. There was an article in Discover a month or two ago (can't find it online, sorry, but I believe it parallels the linked article) where a researcher was trying to tease more information out of a cockroach's walk, discovering that it doesn't actually use a three-feet-down-all-the-time approach but wobbles side to side, remaining dynamically stable as it walks. This is not what you might intuit by simply watching insects walk.
As for "too much" being done, I must disagree. Walking robots aren't as good as they can be or it'd be perfected by now. Wheels are faster, but only over ideal terrain; complicated terrain that would confound the best wheels can often be navigated by legged animals. NASA's interplanetary rovers all use wheels, and all of them eventually encounter situations where they're useless, so if they could deploy a robot lander that could walk effectively (and efficiently), it'd be of tremendous value to them.
Re:Biggest application: NASA (Score:5, Interesting)
Animals don't work like that. In fact, human walking gait is often described as continually falling forward, saved only by the swinging foot meeting the ground before you face-plant. As for insects, some gaits are statically stable simply by virtue of having so many legs, but the info posted by the parent concerning cockroaches using dynamic stability in tripod gait is really interesting.
Re:Biggest application: NASA (Score:3, Funny)
Giant robots are masters of martial arts action. The key to most martial arts is keeping balanced at all times. So to built giant martial arts robots, the Japanese are specializing in static stability.
Most japanese bipeds use ZMP, not static stability (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Most japanese bipeds use ZMP, not static stabil (Score:2)
Re:Biggest application: NASA (Score:1)
Re:Biggest application: NASA (Score:3, Insightful)
Efficiency is the crux of the problem. Legs are incredibly inefficient compared to wheels and until the on-board power problem is handled in an acceptable manner, you won't see a lot of legged robots too far away from an outlet.
Having said that, this is where RHEX shines. Since the legs spin like wheels they have a real advantage compared to traditional walking robots in power savings. As an aside, the thing also moves pretty fast. Again
Re:Biggest application: NASA (Score:2)
That's not a new result. Full, at Berkeley, discovered that a decade ago. I once went up to his lab to see the cockroach treadmill.
Cockroaches appear to run on their hind legs. It's not clear, though, whether the stability comes from active control or from planing on a boundary layer in
Re:Biggest application: NASA (Score:1)
Re:$30M for more insect robots? Sounds like pork. (Score:2)
Yeah, well, that's what happens when ever widening management ass settles into that molded executive chair. Unless there's tall dollars in it, nobody gives a shit, which explains the general fuckitude of everything worthwhile in society.
There are great things that could be done that will make absolutely NO MONEY but nobody will do them because they
Re:$30M for more insect robots? Sounds like pork. (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, how insightful. Everything that could ever be discovered in this particular field has been. It's time to close the books on this forever. Every time I hear this kind of comment, it sets off my "idiot" alarm.
My favorite was from my professor in Applied Electricity. We were in the second week, going over Ohm's Law, I asked how the equations worked when the resistance dropped to zero, like in a supercondu
Re:$30M for more insect robots? Sounds like pork. (Score:4, Interesting)
Riiight. As if contributing to society is what we should all be striving for, sacrificing self-interest on the altar of saintly altruism. They teach you that crap in school nowadays?
In any event, our friend here might be 'contributing to society' by pointing out that the $30 million dollars could be better spent elsewhere. Especially if it's $30 million in TAX dollars, in which case I agree with him.
Max
Re:$30M for more insect robots? Sounds like pork. (Score:1)
Superconductivity is a phenomenon occurring in certain materials at low temperatures, characterised by the complete absence of electrical resistance and the damping of the interior magnetic field (the Meissner effect.)
..and...
Experiments have in fact demonstrated that currents in superconducting rings persist for years without any measurable degradation.
That seems pretty close to zero.
Yes but... (Score:2, Funny)
Forget moving like a cockroach... (Score:3, Funny)
I want to see robots that *survive* like a cockroach.
Well, until they turn evil anyway.
Re:Forget moving like a cockroach... (Score:2)
they wont be moving though, but they're surviving in mint condition without using any energy!
distinguishing traits (Score:1)
And I always thought it was the fact that they demonstrated life. Boy have I been misled!
Hannibal and Attila? (Score:5, Interesting)
I keep telling people... (Score:1)
Re:I keep telling people... (Score:2)
well, so was computer chess, but we see news in AI about it.
The point is that Robotics is a field, and reactive robots, subsumption architecture, and such are sub-fields.
Hearing news about the latest instance is perfectly legitimate.
Re:I keep telling people... (Score:1)
Basically, it would be the same mission as what has now been done, but with a lot more video feed, and maybe a few other basic readings of the terrain. Heck, if they're solar powere
Re:Hannibal and Attila? (Score:1)
No! (Score:1)
RHex Web Page (Score:2, Informative)
Rodney Brooks said it best (Score:5, Informative)
You can get a load of his work from the documentary Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control [imdb.com].
Not my style, thanks! (Score:1, Offtopic)
Just looking at the URL, "amercock.html"... I don't think that's my style of pr0n...
Apparently amercocks are only 1-1.5" long. I saw much bigger overseas on my last vacation...
Huh? (Score:5, Funny)
Because they have six legs? Am I missing something here?
RHex is also cool because it swims (Score:5, Interesting)
More on Bob Full (Score:3, Informative)
This is really old news. RHex has been around for at least a few years now.
Bob Full is one of the lead scientists on the RHex project. His biomimetic approach is amazing. See the following link for one of his lectures.
Robert Full: "Bipedal bugs, galloping ghosts and gripping geckos: BioInspiration for Rapid Running Robots"
http://www.princeton.edu/WebMedia/lectures/ [princeton.edu]
J Wolfgang Goerlich
Re:More on Bob Full (Score:3, Informative)
The new, new, new design is now a semicircular length of rubber-treaded fibreglass, which means they have spring to them. In fact when one leg finally snaps they have to replace all six as the robot depends on them to be balanced in stiffness.
Using these legs they get some great dynamic stability as shown in 'turbo mode' and other showoff moves [umich.edu] plus pronking, etc.
The coolest are the round legs
I'm more interested in how a Slinky walks (Score:1, Interesting)
Obviously the first winner of... (Score:2)
Didja notice in the "slowmo_great_bound_small.avi" movie how Rhex was running away from that dude? It's 'cause it just kicked him in the nads. Hard.
eekk! (Score:2)
CB$@#
Re:eekk!.... ..speaking of gmail (Score:1)
most important feature (Score:5, Funny)
cockroach to explain animal movement (Score:2, Funny)
When my wife sees one of those little buggers she runs away - she hates them.
Not the only people doing this sort of thing (Score:5, Informative)
Not a chance (Score:3, Funny)
I've seen Robot Wars and the walkers never stand a chance...
Incredible (Score:2)
I'm truly amazed, that with all the modern science we have today, that we don't know the answer to this question. I'm not trying to troll, I truly am amazed. We can fly to the moon and back, but something that seems this simple is really incredibly complicated. Wow.
Re:Incredible (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm truly amazed, that with all the modern science we have today, that we don't know the answer to this question.
And we still may not be getting it. All they've built is a robot that coincidentally can also move without falling over--there's nothing (at least as far as I can tell from the article) to say that it works the same way real insects do.
In all fairness, though, the question "how do animals move" is probably less important than "how can we get robots to move". While learning how the biologic
Circular argument (Score:2, Insightful)
Now surely the geniuses behind this would have had to understand the workings of a cockroach to build a reasonable model of one that gives them a reasonable simulation. In this case, they already understand the roach mechanics well and studying the roboroach won't tell them an awful l
BEAM dead? (Score:3)
When insect technologies collide... (Score:2)
Political Science (Score:4, Funny)
Yes, that is my most distinguishing trait! (Score:2, Funny)
Anyway, I just got a kick out of that. I'm sure once I read on, the point will be well made.
Looks like a reject from robotwars (Score:2)
That bio/mech device that was implanted into neo in the matrix, imagine something similar, but a bio animal which really is a bug. in both senses.
or even reptilious: cute Gecko in lew of real cockraoch article [newscientist.com]
Have fun
Comming in 2005 from Tokyo! (Score:1)
finally (Score:1)
Re:finally (Score:1)
meanwhile... (Score:1)
Hey! That was my follow-up comment yesterday! (Score:1)
That's my girlfriends lab, I posted that yesterday!
Why did I get a +2 comment rating, and have someone else get a full frickin' article post? Argh. (here's me being disgruntled)
By the way, they have already been slashdotted in the past http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/06/1 2/0156220&tid=126&tid=14 [slashdot.org], and you didn't mention that it's built at McGill. You could also have included the McGill ARL website link http://www.cim.mcgill.ca/~arlweb/Welcome.html [mcgill.ca]. They love getting slashdotted ;)
Re:Cockroaches and robots (Score:2, Interesting)
Is it because if they use cockroaches not many people will yell at them for animal cruelty, because cockroaches are "evil"?
"
Why do you think that the show FearFactor can get away with doing the Cockroach bit on national TV?
My opinion only, if scientists have studied that we can balance ourselves with only 2 feet and while walking, with one foot up and one foot on the ground, why can't they apply that information to insects?