Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

In tech first, robot uses dead locust’s ear to hear

“The sky’s the limit” for biological-technological system integration, says a Tel Aviv University researcher.

A locust’s ear integrated into a technological system to allow a robot to hear. Photo courtesy of Tel Aviv University
A locust’s ear integrated into a technological system to allow a robot to hear. Photo courtesy of Tel Aviv University

In a scientific breakthrough, Israeli researchers have for the first time succeeded in using a locust ear as a robot’s sensor.

The result: a robot that moves forward when you clap once and back when you clap twice.

The researchers from Tel Aviv University sought to examine how biological systems could be integrated into technological ones.

They first built a robot that can respond to signals it receives from the environment. Then they isolated a dead locust’s ear and kept it functional long enough to connect it to the robot. Finally, they were able to pick up the signals received by the locust’s ear in a way that could be used by the robot.

Their findings were recently published in the Sensors journal.

“We chose the sense of hearing because it can be easily compared to existing technologies, in contrast to the sense of smell, for example, where the challenge is much greater,” explained TAU researcher Ben M. Maoz.

“Our task was to replace the robot’s electronic microphone with a dead insect’s ear, use the ear’s ability to detect the electrical signals from the environment—in this case, vibrations in the air—and, using a special chip, convert the insect input to that of the robot,” he continued.

The principle they demonstrated can be used and applied to other senses, such as smell, sight and touch, he added.

“For example, some animals have amazing abilities to detect explosives or drugs; the creation of a robot with a biological nose could help us preserve human life and identify criminals in a way that is not possible today. Some animals know how to detect diseases. Others can sense earthquakes. The sky’s the limit.”

This article was first published by Israel21c.

Federal prosecutors allege that Zaid Gitesatani punched a Jewish man outside Adas Torah Synagogue during an anti-Israel protest and later boasted about the attack on social media.
Nemanja Starović spoke with JNS during his visit to Washington, which included meetings about Jewish issues with AIPAC and State Department officials.
The U.N. special rapporteur, who has a history of spreading Jew-hatred, was properly served by two Christian charities, who allege that she defamed them, according to a district court in Colorado.
The GOP hopeful for the governor’s mansion called his Democratic opponents answers about whether Israel is guilty of committing genocide “shocking.”
Regavim-led visit points to sewage, dumping and construction encroaching on Area C, kilometers from Jewish state’s population centers.
The Lausanne Project aims to build a generation that is proud of its identity and deeply connected to Jewish values and Israel.