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NJ Researchers Say Army Ants May Hold The Key To Creating 'Autonomous Robot Swarms'
Scientists at New Jersey Institute of Technology and Princeton University has some interesting things about ants to tell you.

Imagine if the George Washington Bridge was able to reposition itself across the river depending on the direction of rush-hour traffic.
Now you know the intense intricacy that Army Ants require to construct their own “bridges.”
According to a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a team of international researchers is claiming that the insects are capable of an amazing feat that may hold the key to developing “autonomous robotic swarms” capable of building “smart bridges,” just like their animal world counterparts.
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The researchers - who hail from New Jersey Institute of Technology, Princeton University, George Washington University, Harvard University, the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology and the University of Konstanz (Germany) – explained the unique abilities of the ants in a news release:
“Army ants are nomadic species. They relocate their colonies throughout the rainforest on a regular basis. In order to facilitate the movement of their large population — a colony can have up to 1 million individuals in some species — on the very uneven forest floor, some of the ant workers use their own bodies to plug holes along the path traveled by the colony. These workers can also attach to each other to span larger gaps, effectively building living bridges made of several dozens of ants in some instances. These bridges can assemble and disassemble in a matter of seconds, allowing the ant colony to travel at high speed across unknown and unpredictable terrain.”
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Researchers say that one surprising finding has been that after starting at intersections between twigs or lianas traveled by the ants, the bridges slowly move away from their starting point, creating shortcuts and progressively lengthening by addition of new workers, before stopping, suspended in mid-air.
“This stopping was a complete surprise for us,” said Christopher Reid, one of the lead authors of the study. “In many cases, the ants could have kept the bridge moving to create better shortcuts, but instead they stopped before achieving the shortest route possible.”
According to a release, Reid and his collaborators discovered that, while ants benefit from shorter traveling distances thanks to their living bridges, they also incur a cost by sequestering workers that could be used for other important tasks, such as prey capture or brood transportation.
When building their bridges, army ants have to meet this cost-benefit tradeoff, and therefore cannot build long bridges between distant parts of their trails without risking lacking workers elsewhere, researchers claim.
And what practical uses does their research have?
“Our work has implications for other self-assembling systems, such as reconfigurable materials and autonomous robotic swarms,” Reid stated.
For example, artificial systems made of independent robots operating via the same principles as the army ants could build large-scale structures as needed, researchers stated.
Such swarms could possibly accomplish tasks such as creating bridges to navigate complex terrain, plugs to repair structural breaches, or supports to stabilize a failing structure.
These systems could also enable robots to operate in complex unpredictable settings, such as in natural-disaster areas, where human presence is dangerous or problematic, researchers say.
The study by Reid et al. was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on November 23 and can be accessed online here.
Photo via Wikipedia
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