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To be a bee: This honey of a robot will fly like no other!

By | October 4, 2012, 4:15 AM PDT

Fly me to the moon. Well, maybe not the moon. But the tiny brain in this little thing could take you places you've never been before, and bring you back again.

The honey bee has a puny brain.

But man is that miniscule mound of gray matter finely tuned as the winged pollinator’s mission control center. It navigates better than a GPS. It unerringly returns the critter back to base every single time, after well-guided sojourns through unfamiliar flowery territory, using the sun and an acute sense of smell.

Couldn’t humans use some of that sweet neural intelligence?

Sure they could. Imagine a plane on a search and rescue mission, finding its way perfectly over unchartered terrain and back home. Or, sticking directly with the the bee’s reason to be, imagine putting such capability into a flying device that would mechanically pollinate crops.

That’s exactly what a group of artificial intelligence scientists in England have in, er, mind, the BBC reports. They’re building a computer model that unlike other AI projects does not mimic the brains of human, monkeys or mice. Rather, it takes its cues from the bee.

“Simpler organisms such as social insects have surprisingly advanced cognitive abilities,”  Dr. James Marshall of the University of Sheffield says. ”Because the honey bee brain is smaller and more accessible than any vertebrate brain, we hope to eventually be able to produce an accurate and complete model that we can test within a flying robot.”

The University of Sheffield is teaming with the University of Sussex to use graphics cards, rather than expensive supercomputers, to build a putative pilot that “can make decisions about what it senses rather than just carry out pre-programmed task,” the BBC writes.

Step aside pea brain. Hello bee brain. Warranty void after one sting.

Photo: Mouagip via Wikimeda.

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Mark Halper

About Mark Halper

Mark Halper is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Mark Halper

Mark Halper

Contributing Editor

Mark Halper has written for TIME, Fortune, Financial Times, the UK's Independent on Sunday, Forbes, New York Times, Wired, Variety and The Guardian. He is based in Bristol, U.K.

Follow him on Twitter.

Mark Halper

Mark Halper

Mark has no financial holdings in the companies he writes about. He occasionally travels at the expense of companies or their press relations agencies in order to report on a company or industry event related to it; Mark will prominently disclose this information when appropriate. This relationship will have no influence on his coverage. Companies he covers do not get to review columns in advance, or select or reject topics.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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0 Votes
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bees
OK, let it call a bee-plane.
Posted by praoss
5th Oct
0 Votes
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Go check with Google - you are a 'weak link'.
In the statement '. . . we hope to eventually be able to produce an accurate and complete model that we can test within a flying robot.. . .
With what you shared in this report - I suggest you use Google and find someone that can help you. I really think you are in a 'cloud of smoke' that leads nowhere.

Don Nagy happy
Posted by Donald.Nagy@...
5th Oct
-1 Votes
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fake bee to polinate "our" crops
Give me a break, please? How well will it polinate? How about all those smart folks talking the corporate industrial farms out of killing off the bees (and the rest of us) with poison chemicals and gmos?
Oh, sorry, then they couldn't get a patent.
Profits way before people, I forgot.
Posted by affordablecomputerguy@...
Updated - 5th Oct
0 Votes
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AI bee
Be the bee! Sorry, couldn't help myself...
Posted by navd0c
8th Oct
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