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UK team develop swarming robots

A new project is to investigate how swarms of miniature robots can work and evolve together.

 
Self assembling robots could performs tasks such as rescuing earthquake victims 
The aim of the University of York’s ‘Symbiotic Evolutionary Robot Organisms’ project - or ‘Symbrion’ - is to understand the principles that govern how robots can form themselves into a single artificial organism. The technique enables them to interact collectively with the physical world, and might ultimately be applied to real-world tasks such as rescuing earthquake victims.

Project leader Dr Jon Timmis said: “This is an increasingly important area of research. We may be able to use the collaborative power of many robots in situations where human intervention isn’t possible. For instance, a Symbrion swarm could be released into a collapsed building following an earthquake, and form themselves into teams to lift rubble or search for survivors.

“This kind of thing is clearly a long way from being realised, but work in this project will allow us to start building the robots of the future.”

‘Multi-robot organisms’ are made up of large swarms of individual robots, each slightly larger than a sugar cube, which work together to form a single artificial life-form. The organisms are able to share information and energy with one another, and to manage their own hardware and software.

The University of York and the University of the West of England are among ten international partners working on the project. The team from York are working on an ‘immune system’ for the robot. The team hope the system will be able to detect faults and make recommendations to a high-level control system about corrective action, much as a person’s adaptive immune system monitors status to keep the body healthy.

When the robots join together into a single organism, each robot will be able to share this crucial information with others, creating an overall system which can evolve in the face of new problems - just as a natural immune system is able to cope with unfamiliar pathogens.

The project is funded internationally by the European Union as part of the Future Emerging Technologies programme.

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