Researchers Reference Flocking Birds to Improve Swarmbots 62
inghamb87 writes "Scientists have studied flocks of starlings and cracked the mystery behind the birds' ability to fly in large formations, and regroup quickly after attacks, without getting confused and ramming into each other. While the information is cool, some scientists seem to think that the best use of this knowledge is not to aid our appreciation of nature, but to make more effective robot swarms. We've talked about swarming robots many times before, but usually researchers look to insects for inspiration."
Boids (Score:5, Informative)
No, but think swarming spambots ... (Score:2)
"Modelling bird swarming behaviour isn't new. Applying 20-year-old research to robots isn't exciting."
Or swarming worms ... DDoSwarming one web server after another.
No more need for IRC C&C ... just release the swarm into the wild.
Re:MOD PARENT UP (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Boids (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.dcs.shef.ac.uk/~paul/publications/boids/index.html [shef.ac.uk]
You can even play with the settings panel on the right side and set off "gunshots."
But yeah, this stuff is far from news.
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I haven't read the paper yet, but it seems like there could be a parallel with gossip protocols and flooding protocols: if each bird tracks a small number of randomly chosen neighbours, information can move through the swarm just as efficiently as if each
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http://www.newscientist.com/blog/technology/2007/05/landscape-with-weapon.html [newscientist.com]
Modelled after birds? (Score:5, Funny)
Developing autonomous swarming robots: £5m
Watching your prototype robots fly straight into the nearest window at high speed and die: Priceless
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Now, now... (Score:1)
Hmm (Score:1)
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Ans fish school makin gthem easy to catch in a net (Score:1)
patent your swarm net before it gets declared a military secret and you'll make out like a bandito.
Odd to dismiss it so early (Score:4, Interesting)
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its undeniable and sad (Score:1)
get over it, most of the good roboticists are or will be part of some weapo
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get over it, most of the good roboticists are or will be part of some weapon industry.
Indeed, it's very hard to be part of an industry that doesn't at least indirectly help the military. Even an improvement in textile loom speed can produce cheaper uniforms. The military has a keen interest in everything from alternative fuels, to advances in materials science, to food preservatives. If you can think of an improvement for something, it is likely that it can (and will) be used in some way, however small, to kill people more efficiently.
:)
As you say, get over it.
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Now you've foiled my nefarious plan!
Turtles, Termites, and Traffic Jams (Score:2, Interesting)
The nature behind it is rather simple. Imagine you have a mob of angry rioters walking down the street. No one really has a plan, but the mob moves together. More or less, no one individually generally wants to break off by themselves and smash in a window and take a TV from the appliance store. It is perceived as a risk of sorts. Eventually though, someone will want to do something enough that their want levels st
swarms are not creepy (Score:1)
ftfa - ' A swarm of bees is frightening enough, but a swarm of robots is worse.'
What the author is missing is the idea that a swarm of bees is one of the most amazing examples of cooperation in the animal kingdom. Anybody would agree that, by itself, a single bee is a simple organism capable of only a very few rudimentary tasks. Yet a swarm of bees can build structures of a complexity humans are now only beginning
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FA Just Another Dreamy Blog (Score:3, Informative)
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jumbo packet swarms in mesh networks (Score:3, Interesting)
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Not appreciating, just flattering. (Score:2)
TGTRSAH (Score:1)
Tag (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Tag (Score:4, Funny)
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of course,
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Link to article (Score:2)
Still don't see a solution - or description. (Score:2)
But it DOES show that they've (so far) only discovered a couple ways that some parts of the behavior's laws are clearly different from what was previously assumed: That the spacing is non-isotropic in the short range and that the birds are interacting with particular individual neighbors, rather than interchangeably with whatever other birds are within a certain distance.
Still got a year to go on the three-year project. May
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See my reply to the GP for a link to their preprint. In the preprint, notes to figure 4, they describe how to set up a numerical simulation with the behaviour they observed. The model just considers headings, not velocities, and at each timestep just averages the current heading with those of n nearest neighbours, without regard to how far those n neighbours are away.
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Interaction Ruling Animal Collective Behaviour Depends on Topological rather than Metric Distance: Evidence from a Field Study [arxiv.org]
Numerical models indicate that collective animal behaviour may emerge from simple local rules of interaction among the individuals. However, very little is known about the nature of such interaction, so that models and theories mostly rely on aprioristic assumptions. By reconstructing the three-dimensional position of individual birds in airborne flocks
Particle Swarm Optimisation? (Score:1)
PDF of referenced collective behavior research (Score:1, Informative)
M. Ballerini, N. Cabibbo, R. Candelier, A. Cavagna, E. Cisbani, I. Giardina, V. Lecomte, A. Orlandi, G. Parisi, A. Procaccini, M. Viale, and V. Zdravkovic
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/105/4/1232 [pnas.org]
anyone misread the headline (Score:1)
Link To Referenced Article (Score:1)
The Edge of Chaos, anyone? (Score:1)
http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/navy/docs/np13/np13appc.htm [fas.org]
RFC 2549? (Score:1)
You have no idea how long I waited to try to use that within context
Personally... (Score:1)
I want them alone, cold and a little bit afraid. I think it will make it easier to keep them in line.
Seagulls at the peer (Score:2)