Posted on 10/08/2013 11:44:30 PM PDT by ClaytonP
At the TEDx conference in Detroit last week, RoboRoach #12 scuttled across the exhibition floor, pursued not by an exterminator but by a gaggle of fascinated onlookers. Wearing a tiny backpack of microelectronics on its shell, the cockroacha member of the Blaptica dubia specieszigzagged along the corridor in a twitchy fashion, its direction controlled by the brush of a finger against an iPhone touch screen (as seen in video above).
RoboRoach #12 and its brethren are billed as a do-it-yourself neuroscience experiment that allows students to create their own cyborg insects. The roach was the main feature of the TEDx talk by Greg Gage and Tim Marzullo, co-founders of an educational company called Backyard Brains. After a summer Kickstarter campaign raised enough money to let them hone their insect creation, the pair used the Detroit presentation to show it off and announce that starting in November, the company will, for $99, begin shipping live cockroaches across the nation, accompanied by a microelectronic hardware and surgical kits geared toward students as young as 10 years old.
That news, however, hasnt been greeted warmly by everyone. Gage and Marzullo, both trained as neuroscientists and engineers, say that the purpose of the project is to spur a neuro-revolution by inspiring more kids to join the fields when they grow up, but some critics say the project is sending the wrong message. "They encourage amateurs to operate invasively on living organisms" and "encourage thinking of complex living organisms as mere machines or tools," says Michael Allen Fox, a professor of philosophy at Queen's University in Kingston, Canada.
Its kind of weird to control via your smartphone a living organism, says William Newman, a presenter at TEDx and managing principal at the Newport Consulting Group, who got to play with a RoboRoach at the conference. At the same time, he says, he is pleased that the project will teach students about the neuroscience behind brain stimulation treatments that are being used to treat two of his friends with Parkinsons disease.
The roaches movements to the right or left are controlled by electrodes that feed into their antennae and receive signals by remote controlvia the Bluetooth signals emitted by smartphones. To attach the device to the insect, students are instructed to douse the insect in ice water to anesthetize it, sand a patch of shell on its head so that the superglue and electrodes will stick, and then insert a groundwire into the insects thorax. Next, they must carefully trim the insects antennae, and insert silver electrodes into them. Ultimately, these wires receive electrical impulses from a circuit affixed to the insects back.
Gage says the roaches feel little pain from the stimulation, to which they quickly adapt. But the notion that the insects arent seriously harmed by having body parts cut off is disingenuous, says animal behavior scientist Jonathan Balcombe of the Humane Society University in Washington, D.C. If it was discovered that a teacher was having students use magnifying glasses to burn ants and then look at their tissue, how would people react?
Gage says that in his experience, working carefully and closely with insects and other animals in experiments can sensitize students to the fact that roaches are actually similar to us and have the same neurons that we have. He also notes that the company doesnt kill their own roaches after the experiments, but sends them to a retirement tank that the team calls Shady Acres. Although they may be missing legs or antennae, the insects tend to get on with their lives after the experiments, he says. They do what they like to do: make babies, eat, and poop.
I try not to downplay the fact that in science we use animal models and a lot of times they are killed, Gage says. As scientists, we do this all the time, but it happens behind closed doors. By following the surgical instructions, he says, all students learn that they have to care for the roachestreating wounds by putting a little Vaseline on them, and minimizing suffering whenever possible. Still, Gage acknowledges, we get a lot of e-mails telling us were teaching kids to be psychopaths.
The RoboRoach gives you a way of playing with living things, like a short-lived version of the forbidden Imperius Curse in the Harry Potter novels, says bioethicist Gregory Kaebnick of the Hastings Center in Garrison, New York. He finds the product unpleasant, but adds that he wont be calling for a boycott, either. Ill just be happy that I found a cleverly marketed consumer item that I am very happy not to own.
An Army of Cyborg Roaches controlled by an Iphone...move over Sharknado.
The Norwegian Sem-Jacobsen did largescale human experimentation, controlling his helpless subjects by remote.
He’d have been an iphone-enthusiast.
25% of his subjects died. There’s a mass grave, somewhere near gaustad. CIA financed project, actually.
This concern for insects? How about the unborn? Is a human fetus if less concern than an insect? Apparently
Remote controlled spying using a cyborg cockroach.....
This is a scene straight out of the 1997 scifi Bruce Willis
film The Fifth Element.
> Remote controlled spying using a cyborg cockroach.....
This is a scene straight out of the 1997 scifi Bruce Willis
film The Fifth Element.
Life imitates art and vice versa. The 0 administration are probably working on a humanized version of same but won’t need it with the educational indoctrination system and the LSM performin the same function.../s
At the current devolutionary rate of humans and the educational
system it won,t be long before the cockroaches are smarter than a
lot of the electorate.
That's not what that article says. That was a report on the condition of Sem Jacobsen, their country's bobsledding champion who was recently hospitalized after a training run in which his sled flew off the track and he landed on his head on a parked car.........
Lol. What is not so well known is that the country continued that ethical line into our time, and that it’s still pretty much focused on Gaustad.
Stalinist regimes do not change, even if the party names do.
Personally, I think they are related. Once you start looking at life, any life, in a utilitarian manner, you start down a slippery slope leading to the ability to rationalize just about anything.
are actually similar to us”
No, they are not actually similar to us. They, as all living creatures, share some characteristics with us. We and bananas have 50% of DNA in common. SO?
Spycam cockroaches for $99. Welcome to the internets.
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