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View Full Version : Cyborg beetle, UC Berkeley and Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University



Airicist
19th March 2015, 07:07
Contributors:

UC Berkeley

Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University

Airicist
19th March 2015, 07:16
Article "Cyborg beetle research allows free-flight study of insects (https://news.berkeley.edu/2015/03/16/beetle-backpack-steering-muscle)"

by Sarah Yang
March 16, 2015

Airicist
19th March 2015, 07:18
https://youtu.be/iljHXpE4LG8

Remote-controlled beetle - Nanyang Technological University Singapore

Published on Mar 16, 2015


Cyborg insect research led by engineers at UC Berkeley and Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University (NTU) is enabling new revelations about a muscle used by beetles for finely graded turns.
By strapping tiny computers and wireless radios onto the backs of giant flower beetles and recording neuromuscular data as the bugs flew untethered, scientists determined that a muscle known for controlling the folding of wings was also critical to steering. The researchers then used that information to improve the precision of the beetles’ remote-controlled turns.
This study, published in the journal Current Biology, showcases the potential of wireless sensors in biological research. Research in this field could also lead to applications such as tools to aid search-and-rescue operations in areas too dangerous for humans.
Video courtesy of Hirotaka Sato/NTU Singapore

Airicist
30th November 2016, 07:56
https://youtu.be/tgLjhT7S15U

The Cyborg Beetles designed to save human lives

Published on Nov 29, 2016


In the future, we may have remote-controlled insects to reach places humans cannot. At least that's what Dr. Hirotaka Sato, an aerospace engineer from Singapore, is hoping.

Motherboard went to Dr. Sato's lab in Singapore to take one of his cyborg beetles for a test flight.