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Scientist: Military Working on Cyborg Spy Moths
	
		Wednesday, May       30, 2007
	
		By Jonathan Richards
	
		
			
		
		
	
	
					
		
	
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			A Blackburn's sphinx moth in Hawaii in a 2002 file photo.
			 A Blackburn's sphinx moth in Hawaii in a 2002 file photo.
			
			
				
			
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At some point in the not-too-distant future, a moth may take flight in
the hills of northern Pakistan, and flap towards a suspected terrorist
training camp.
		
		
			 But this will be no ordinary moth.
	
			
			 Inside it will be a 
computer chip that was implanted when the creature was still a 
pupa, in the cocoon, meaning that the moth's entire nervous 
system can be controlled remotely.
	
			
			 
• Click here for FOXNews.com's Patents and Innovation Center.
	
			
			 The moth will thus be capable of landing in the camp without arousing suspicion, all the while beaming 
video and other information back to its masters via what its developers refer to as a "reliable tissue-machine interface."
	
			
			 The creation of insects whose flesh grows around computer parts — known from science fiction as 
cyborgs — has been described as one of the most ambitious robotics projects ever conceived by the 
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the research and development arm of the U.S. Department of Defense.
	
			
			
				
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  Rod
Brooks, director of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence
Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which is
involved with the research, said in a speech last week at the
University of Southampton in England that robotics was increasingly at
the forefront of U.S. military research.
	
			
			 Brooks said that the remote-controlled moths, described by DARPA as just part of its overall research into 
microelectromechanical systems, or MEMS, were one of a number of technologies soon to be deployed in combat zones.
	
			
			 "This
is going to happen," said Brooks. "It's not science like developing the
nuclear bomb, which costs billions of dollars. It can be done
relatively cheaply."
	
			
			 "Moths are creatures that
need little food and can fly all kinds of places," he continued. "A
bunch of experiments have been done over the past couple of years where
simple animals, such as rats and cockroaches, have been operated on and
driven by joysticks, but this is the first time where the chip has been
injected in the pupa stage and 'grown' inside it."
	
			
			 "Once the moth hatches," Brooks said, "machine learning is used to control it."
	
			
			 Brooks has worked on robotic technology for more than 30 years and is a founder of iRobot, the MIT-derived manufacturer of both 
Roomba robot floor cleaners and 
PackBots, military robots used by the Pentagon to defuse explosive devices laid by insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan.
	
			
			 Brooks said that the military would be increasingly reliant on "semi-autonomous" devices, including ones which could fire.
	
			
			 "The
DoD has said it wants one-third of all missions to be unmanned by 2015,
and there's no doubt their things will become weaponized, so the
question comes: Should they be given targeting authority?"
	
			
			 "The
prevailing view in the army at the moment seems to be that they
shouldn't," he said, "but perhaps it's time to consider updating
treaties like the Geneva Convention to include clauses which regulate
their use."
	
			
			 Debates such as those over
stem-cell research would "pale in comparison" to the increasingly
blurred distinction between creatures — including humans — and
machines, Brooks told the Southampton audience.
	
			
			 "
Biological engineering
is coming," Brooks said. "There are already more than 100,000 people
with cochlear implants, which have a direct neural connection, and
chips are being inserted in people's retinas to combat macular
degeneration. By the 2012 Olympics, we're going to be dealing with
systems which can aid the oxygen uptake of athletes."
	
			
			 "There's
going to be more and more technology in our bodies, and to stomp on all
this technology and try to prevent it happening is just ... well,
there's going to be a lot of moral debates," he said.
	
			
			 Another
iRobot project being developed as part of the U.S. military's "Future
Combat Systems" program, Brooks said, was a small, unmanned vehicle
known as a 
SUGV
(pronounced "sug-vee"), basically the next generation of the PackBot,
one which could be dispatched in front of troops to gauge the threat in
an urban environment.
	
			
			 The 30-pound device,
which can survive a drop of 30 feet onto concrete, has a small "head"
with infra-red and regular cameras which send information back to a
command unit, as well as an audio-sensing feature called "Red Owl"
which can determine the direction from which enemy fire originates.
	
			
			 "It's designed to be the troop's eyes and ears and, unlike one of its predecessors, this one can swim, too," Mr Brooks said.