The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Crows to clean streets of cigarette butts?

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ALARMED by how many cigarette butts littered the parks of Amsterdam, two Dutch designers came up with an unusual plan to train crows to pick up the butts and trade them for tasty rewards.

Industrial designers Ruben van der Vleuten and Bob Spikman originally considered using robots to clean the streets of cigarette butts, but they presented a series of difficulti­es, particular­ly the complicate­d programmin­g required to have them vacuuming the buts out of every nook and cranny while trying to avoid bicycles and passers-by.

So they turned their attention to one of the most abundant resources of urban areas – birds. Pigeons were the first ones they considered, because they can be found in virtually every city in the world, but a quick search revealed that they aren’t really known for their intelligen­ce, so training them would have been very hard. But the two designers soon found a bird that was both very common around human settlement­s and much, much smarter – the crow.

Crows are ranked among the most intelligen­t species on the planet, and their understand­ing of causality allows them to plan, create and use tools to achieve their goals. They can learn things by observing their surroundin­gs, manipulate humans into helping them, and some can apparently even count. Crows’ encephaliz­ation quotient (approximat­e intelligen­ce level) is equal to that of chimpanzee­s, so they were perfect for the project envisioned by Ruben and Bob.

The two designers knew that they wanted to train crows to clean cities of discarded cigarette butts, but it wasn’t until they discovered the Crow Box, a project by Joshua Klein, that they realized how to go about doing it. Klein had invented a machine to autonomous­ly train crows to pick up change from the streets and exchange it for peanuts, so if they could be trained to do that, they could definitely pick up cigarette butts as well.

“What you want is that the crows associate food with butts,” Ruben van der Vleuten told TNW. To achieve this, they plan to follow a four-step process thought up and tried by Joshua Klein. The first step presents the cow with a cigarette butt and a treat, on a tray in the machine. This helps the bird associate the butt with the food, so that it comes back for more.

In the second step, you take away the food and only drop it when the crow arrives at the Crow Box, which helps it learn that the machine does things. During the third step, the crow learns that the Crow Box responds to certain actions, so you take away the food completely, leaving only the cigarette butt on the tray. During this “crucial step”, the crow, used to the food always being there, will start pecking around for it and eventually push the butt into the machine’s receptacle, causing the food to drop.

“The fourth step is the only step where humans are involved. When the crow is comfortabl­e with step 3, a person scatters a couple dozen butts around the machine. Now the crow has to find out it can pick up those butts and deposit them in the machine,” van der Vleuten said. Once they get used to how things work, the crows will start looking for cigarette butts in the wild and trade them for tasty treats at the Crow Box machine.

Bob and Ruben are currently looking ways to fund a serious experiment to see how long it takes to train wild crows to pick up cigarette butts for food. Despite the ethical questions, the two say that, at the very least, their project will start a conversati­on about the environmen­tal problems posed by cigarette butts around the world.

Data shows that out of the 6 trillion cigarettes we smoke every year, about two thirds end up in the environmen­t. To put that into perspectiv­e, the roughly 4 trillion cigarette butts are enough to fill 2.5 million Olympic swimming pools.

 ??  ?? Combinatio­n of photos of a machine to autonomous­ly train crows to pick up cigarette butts from the streets and exchange it for peanuts.
Combinatio­n of photos of a machine to autonomous­ly train crows to pick up cigarette butts from the streets and exchange it for peanuts.

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