Cyborg beetle: Shown here is a giant flower beetle carrying a microprocessor, radio receiver, and microbattery and implanted with several electrodes. To control the insect’s flight, scientists wirelessly deliver signals to the payload, which sends electrical signals through the electrode to the brain and flight muscles.
Michel Maharbiz

Computing

The Army's Remote-Controlled Beetle

The insect's flight path can be wirelessly controlled via a neural implant.

  • Thursday, January 29, 2009
  • By Emily Singer

A giant flower beetle with implanted electrodes and a radio receiver on its back can be wirelessly controlled, according to research presented this week. Scientists at the University of California developed a tiny rig that receives control signals from a nearby computer. Electrical signals delivered via the electrodes command the insect to take off, turn left or right, or hover in midflight. The research, funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), could one day be used for surveillance purposes or for search-and-rescue missions.

Beetles and other flying insects are masters of flight control, integrating sensory feedback from the visual system and other senses to navigate and maintain stable flight, all the while using little energy. Rather than trying to re-create these systems from scratch, Michel Maharbiz and his colleagues aim to take advantage of the beetle's natural abilities by melding insect and machine. His group has previously created cyborg beetles, including ones that have been implanted with electronic components as pupae. But the current research, presented at the IEEE MEMS in Italy, is the first demonstration of a wireless beetle system.

The beetle's payload consists of an off-the-shelf microprocessor, a radio receiver, and a battery attached to a custom-printed circuit board, along with six electrodes implanted into the animals' optic lobes and flight muscles. Flight commands are wirelessly sent to the beetle via a radio-frequency transmitter that's controlled by a nearby laptop. Oscillating electrical pulses delivered to the beetle's optic lobes trigger takeoff, while a single short pulse ceases flight. Signals sent to the left or right basilar flight muscles make the animal turn right or left, respectively.

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Most previous research in controlling insect flight has focused on moths. But beetles have certain advantages. The giant flower beetle's size--it ranges in weight from four to ten grams and is four to eight centimeters long--means that it can carry relatively heavy payloads. To be used for search-and-rescue missions, for example, the insect would need to carry a small camera and heat sensor.

In addition, the beetle's flight can be controlled relatively simply. A single signal sent to the wing muscles triggers the action, and the beetle takes care of the rest. "That allows the normal function to control the flapping of the wings," says Jay Keasling, who was not involved in the beetle research but who collaborates with Maharbiz. Minimal signaling conserves the battery, extending the life of the implant. Moths, on the other hand, require a stream of electrical signals in order to keep flying.

Video

The research has been driven in large part by advances in the microelectronics industry, with miniaturization of microprocessors and batteries.

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durs

44 Comments

  • 1110 Days Ago
  • 01/29/2009

This reminds me of George Carlin's commentary on "Military Intelligence". 

Reply

zshann

1 Comment

  • 1110 Days Ago
  • 01/29/2009

Beware!

Beware of Bug sprays and shoes there, Beetle my man!

Reply

Handshake

19 Comments

  • 1109 Days Ago
  • 01/30/2009

With great power come great responsibilities

"No Animals Were Harmed During the Making of This Movie."

Reply

Freedom742

2 Comments

  • 1108 Days Ago
  • 01/31/2009

Bug Boy

Instead of insects I believe "Bug Boy, Michel Maharbiz" himself would be a better test subject for this abomination. Last I heard, hell is still warm "Bug Boy", dress appropriately.

Reply

MitRespect

1 Comment

  • 1082 Days Ago
  • 02/26/2009

Re: Bug Boy

Ridiculous comment. Maybe if you or your mother were found alive by an emergency response team of dogs, beetled airborne cameras, and first responders, you'd get off your judgemental throne and honor some beneficial uses of technology.

Reply

Realism

1 Comment

  • 326 Days Ago
  • 03/24/2011

Re: Bug Boy

"Maybe if you or your mother" were implanted with electrodes to dictate your every move for the interests of military surveillance then maybe you would get off of your hypocritically judgemental soap box and consider the impacts on another living creature instead of just thinking about what they can do for your species.

Reply

lonestarintl

1 Comment

  • 1107 Days Ago
  • 02/01/2009

this story kind of bugs me.

Reply

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Flip

30 Comments

  • 1107 Days Ago
  • 02/01/2009

Keep Tweaking

Give this device GPS navigation and voice like Ringo's and you've got a winner.

Reply

rewolf

1 Comment

  • 1105 Days Ago
  • 02/03/2009

free will :P

man i feel a little sorry for the beetle in that video haha

Reply

mkogrady

423 Comments

  • 1105 Days Ago
  • 02/03/2009

Real Applications for RC Bugs

How about wiring up a couple hundred Locusts and steer the hungry hoards away from human food supplies? If you can steer a beetle, why not another type of bug?

Reply

MacLir

12 Comments

Reply

rogkru

4 Comments

  • 1071 Days Ago
  • 03/09/2009

WOW

fingers-crossed USA runs out of money soon!
clearly you lot over in the colonies are warmongering weirdos.

Reply

Justice

2 Comments

  • 949 Days Ago
  • 07/09/2009

Cyborg insects used as control weapons against American Citizens

I believe these cyborg insect bio-machines are much more advanced now than they let the public know.  These advanced cyborgs in their nymph stage have been maliciously implanted into unsuspecting American Citizens human body for experimentation, control and unethical purposes.  These cyborgs experiments are let to grow to adulthood inside the unsuspecting citizen.  These cyborgs are controlled by wireless signals and can deliver toxins to a human body.  They were used by the suppressive devilish and corrupted  Bush/Chaney administration as terrorism torture weapons against the prisoners in Guantanamo, Cuba.  These cyborgs were also implanted in law abiding Democrats and other targeted law abiding American Citizens with other health problems.  The other health problems would act as an excuse to defer the implanted cyborg toxic capabilities in order to divert guilt incase of possible exposure. These cyborgs implanted in many citizens have created a new disease currently being investigated by the CDC named - Morgellons Disease.

The culprits... the special operation individuals hired by the Bush administration without Congress knowledge to do their illegal dirty work.  Chaney/Bush must go to trial for being Traitors to the people of our United States of America. The Bush/Chaney administration has committed a lot of crimes against America and our citizens, with these controlling experiments, as well as their involvement in planning 9/11 and blowing the third buidling containing evidence (which was the CIA headquarters where the planes were being piloted by remote control against the twin towers).  These created their excuse to justify going to war and secure The BUSH oil interests and that of the corpotocracy they serve.  Bush/Chaney are not for the people, but the special interests of their pocket books and the oil monopolies they serve. 

The above is the Truth and the Whole Truth.  Wake up America, it is time to bring these horrible people to trial.... 

Reply

meyers7

11 Comments

  • 948 Days Ago
  • 07/10/2009

Re: Cyborg insects used as control weapons against American Citizens

Do you really believe what you wrote? Some people just bug me.

Reply

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Justice

2 Comments

  • 948 Days Ago
  • 07/10/2009

Re: Cyborg insects used as control weapons against American Citizens

Yes, I believe it 100%.

I can see behind the veil, and I analyze statistics, facts, probabilities, and motives.  I am not indoctrinated to think inside the box like most people are.  I see what is infront for the truth it reveals - good or bad.

Reply

seriously?

1 Comment

  • 367 Days Ago
  • 02/11/2011

Re: Cyborg insects used as control weapons against American Citizens

If someone had that kind of power and was the kind of person you clam Bush to be, why in the world would they step down from power? and why in the world would they let people like you post things like that and get away with it? it just is not logical.

Reply

sunzeye

1 Comment

  • 10 Days Ago
  • 02/03/2012

Teacher, leave those bugs alone!

Reply

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