DragonflEye Project Wants to Turn Insects Into Cyborg Drones
As hard as we're trying, it's going to be a very long time before we're able to build a robotic insect that's anywhere near as capable or versatile as a real one. So for now, we rely on a cybernetics approach to get real insects to do our bidding instead. Over the past several years researchers have managed to steer large insects using electrical implants, a sort of brute-force method with limited real-world usefulness. R&D company Draper are hoping to overcome those limitations by creating a cybernetic dragonfly that combines "miniaturized navigation, synthetic biology, and neurotechnology." To steer the dragonflies, the Draper engineers are developing a way of genetically modifying the nervous system of the insects so they can respond to pulses of light.
Jan-25-2017, 23:15:02 GMT
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