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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Remote-controlled search-and-rescue roaches are coming
by Brooks Hays
College Station, Texas (UPI) Mar 5, 2015


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Cockroaches may soon carry out reconnaissance work in the wake of disasters, exploring collapsed buildings and nuclear meltdowns before humans are sent into harm's way.

As researchers at Texas A&M recently showed, the durable insects can quickly be turned into remote-controlled cyborgs. They did so by implanting electrodes to control certain nerves in three species of cockroaches. On the test subjects' backs, the researchers installed a tiny, lightweight backpack featuring a microcontroller, wireless transceiver and battery.

The technology allowed scientists to remotely deliver tiny electric shocks, steering the insect left and right. The new study proved their efforts were successful in pulling the cockroaches in the proper direction 60 percent of the time.

"[They] go anywhere you guide them to," Hong Liang, a materials scientist at Texas A&M, told Live Science.

Cockroaches could prove ideal for exploring nuclear and chemical disasters, as the insects are remarkably immune to radiation.

"Insects can do things a robot cannot," Liang told the Guardian. "They can go into small places, sense the environment, and if there's movement, from a predator say, they can escape much better than a system designed by a human."

"We wanted to find ways to work with them," he added.

Liang and his colleagues are now working on a device that would use vibration to manipulate the cockroaches movement. This would negate the need for the invasive surgery that the electrodes installation requires.

The study was published this week in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.

Similar roach-controlling technology has be sold as a kit by a Kickstarter-backed company called Backyard Brains.


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World Bank admits flaws in resettlement practices
Washington (AFP) March 4, 2015
The World Bank said Wednesday it would reform the way it handles the resettlement of people moved to make way for development projects, saying internal reviews have revealed significant flaws. "We took a hard look at ourselves on resettlement and what we found caused me deep concern," said World Bank President Jim Yong Kim in a statement. The global development lender has been sharply c ... read more


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