The Asian Age

Snug as a bug: The hated cockroach inspires a helpful robot

- WILL DUNHAM

People use a lot of words to describe the reviled cockroach: disgusting, ugly, sneaky and repulsive, to name a few. But it may be time to add a surprising new one: inspiratio­nal.

Scientists said on Monday they have built a small search- and- rescue robot, inspired by the ability of cockroache­s to squeeze through tiny crevices, designed to navigate through rubble to find survivors after natural disasters or bombings.

“We feel strongly that cockroache­s are one of nature’s most revolting animals, but they can teach us important design principles,” University of California, Berkeley integrativ­e biology professor Robert Full said.

Using a specially- built obstacle course, the researcher­s observed how cockroache­s scurried in less than a second through crevices smaller than a quarter of their height by compressin­g their jointed exoskeleto­ns in half.

Once inside the crevice, the cockroache­s managed to move rapidly, at nearly 20 body lengths per second, with their legs splayed completely out to their sides.

“If you scale it up to the size of a human, it would be equivalent to about 70 miles per hour ( 113 kph), over twice the speed of the fastest sprinter,” said Harvard University biologist Kaushik Jayaram, who worked on the research while at UCBerkeley.

The researcher­s said the cockroache­s were about a half inch tall when they ran freely, but compressed their bodies to about a 10th of an inch to get through cracks.

Experts have been studying animal locomotion in order to invent robots that can manoeuvre in tough environmen­ts. For example, sidewinder rattlesnak­es inspired a serpentine robot.

“Nature has a library of design ideas. This diversity enables discovery. You never know where basic research will lead. The most important discoverie­s are often from the most unexpected creatures, some of which are disgusting,” Full added.

The observatio­ns involving the species Periplanet­a americana, the American cockroach, inspired the design of a prototype softbodied, multi- legged robot called CRAM ( Compressib­le Robot with Articulate­d Mechanisms) that in the future could be used in swarms to help locate survivors in collapsed structures.

 ?? — AP ?? Scientists said cockroache­s were about a half- inch tall when they ran freely, but compressed their bodies to about a 10th of an inch to get through cracks.
— AP Scientists said cockroache­s were about a half- inch tall when they ran freely, but compressed their bodies to about a 10th of an inch to get through cracks.

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