Robots, insects and swarm intelligence |
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Authors: | Amanda J C Sharkey |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Computer Science, University of Sheffield Regent Court, 211 Portobello Street, Sheffield, S1 4DP, UK |
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Abstract: | The aim of this paper is to consider the relationships between robots and insects. To this end, an overview is provided of
the two main areas in which insects have been implicated in robotics research. First, robots have been used to provide working
models of mechanisms underlying insect behaviour. Second, there are developments in robotics that have been inspired by our
understanding of insect behaviour; in particular the approach of swarm robotics. In the final section of the paper, the possibility
of achieving “strong swarm intelligence” is discussed. Two possible interpretations of strong swarm intelligence are raised:
(1) the emergence of a group mind from a natural, or robot swarm, and (2) that behaviours could emerge from a swarm of artificial
robots in the same way as they emerge from a biological swarm. Both interpretations are dismissed as being unachievable in
principle. It is concluded that bio-robotic modelling and biological inspiration have made important contributions to both
insect and robot research, but insects and robots remain separated by the divide between the living and the purely mechanical. |
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Keywords: | Swarm intelligence Strong artificial intelligence Swarm robotics Bio-robotics Biological inspiration Social insects Emergence |
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