Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,694,118 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Rescue rat: could wired rodents save the day? (This week).


A Brooklyn-based research team has wired a rat's brain so that someone at a laptop computer can steer the animal through mazes and over rubble.

The research gives a glimpse of the possibilities for training animals by sending cues and rewards directly to their brains, says Sanjiv Talwar A talwar, talwaar, or tulwar (Devanagari: तलवार) is a type of sword prevalent in medieval India dating back to at least the 13th century. It bears a resemblance to the Persian shamshir and the Turkish kilic.  of the State University of New York (body) State University of New York - (SUNY) The public university system of New York State, USA, with campuses throughout the state.  Downstate Medical Center. In the May 2 Nature, he and his colleagues predict their accomplishment could inspire novel approaches to land mine detection or search-and-rescue missions.

The project grew out of research to develop new types of prostheses Prostheses
A synthetic object that resembles a missing anatomical part.

Mentioned in: Microphthalmia and Anophthalmia
 for paralyzed par·a·lyze  
tr.v. par·a·lyzed, par·a·lyz·ing, par·a·lyz·es
1. To affect with paralysis; cause to be paralytic.

2. To make unable to move or act: paralyzed by fear.
 people that will use electric impulses sent directly to and from the brain. In 1999, coauthor John Chapin and his colleagues at the medical center demonstrated that signals from a rat's brain could move a robotic arm.

Talwar says that the January 2001 earthquake in Bhuj, India, and the September terrorist attacks inspired the researchers to use elements of their prosthesis prosthesis (prŏs`thĭsĭs): see artificial limb.
prosthesis

Artificial substitute for a missing part of the body, usually an arm or leg.
 work to create remote-control rats that might eventually navigate in collapsed buildings. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), U.S. government agency administered by the Department of Defense (see Defense, United States Department of).  funds the research.

The team fitted five rats with electrodes in their brains and backpacks containing electronics. For cues, the researchers sent electric signals to brain regions that process impulses from whiskers. For rewards, the researchers stimulated a pleasure center known as the medial forebrain bundle medial forebrain bundle
n.
A fiber system running longitudinally through the lateral zone of the hypothalamus, connecting it with the midbrain tegmentum and various components of the limbic system.
.

The researchers put each rat in. a maze and, as the animal approached a turning point, stimulated its brain to mimic a whisker touch on one side. When a rat turned in the direction of the virtual touch, the researchers buzzed the brain's pleasure center.

These signals to the pleasure center seemed to spur a rat to go forward, even when the path required climbing steps or hopping off a ledge. "He learns, `If I keep moving, I feel these bursts of transcendental happiness;" Talwar says. "The rats figure it out in 5 or 10 minutes:'

The researchers explored the capabilities of this system by steering the rats over a jumble of concrete, across a brightly lit arena that rats would normally avoid, and even up a tree. The rats move far more nimbly than robots can, says Talwar. The team envisions rescue animals sending back signals that indicate they've reached their goal.

Robin Murphy, who develops search-and-rescue robots at the University of South Florida


    [
 in Tampa, says that the wired rat may be useful in experiments, but "it does not appear to be appropriate for search and rescue."

Murphy cautions that many practical questions remain, such as how people could guide a rat when it's out of sight and whether virtual rewards can keep it on task amidst distractions.

She points out that disaster sites often pose severe hazards for living things, such as scorching temperatures and areas with no oxygen, Murphy also expresses a personal qualm qualm  
n.
1. A sudden feeling of sickness, faintness, or nausea.

2. A sudden disturbing feeling: qualms of homesickness.

3.
 about sending an animal, even a rat, into danger. "One of the reasons many of us are in robotics is because robots can reduce the risk to living things," says Murphy.

However, Wilma Melville of the National Disaster Search Dog Foundation in Ojai, Calif., says she sees a need for agile animals in search work. She comments, "It's long been our realization that cats would be great at this, but who wants to go try to train a cat?"
COPYRIGHT 2002 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1U2NY
Date:May 4, 2002
Words:547
Previous Article:Ancient Whodunit: scientists indict wee suspects in ancient deaths. (This week).(Brief Article)
Next Article:All cried out: major depression puts lid on tears. (This week).(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Where the rats are. (urban California areas)
Young rats fill in holes in the brain. (rats regrow injured brain)(Biology)(Brief Article)
Model explains bubonic plague's persistence.(research speculates that the bubonic plague never truly goes away, but attacks humans only when the rat...
First mammal joins the eusocial club.
Rodent Run.(DNA-modified rats)
Smells a rat. (Letters).
Gross out? (Activities & Oddities).(rats at the Karni Mata temple, India)
Yellow pygmy rice rat (Oligoryzomys flavescens) and hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in Uruguay. (Research).
Getting rid of rats.
Naked and not: two species of mole rats run complex societies underground.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles