ANALYSIS OF BEE BEHAVIOUR MAY MAKE BETTER ROBOTS Scientists at the Georgia Institute of Technology in the USA have developed a new computer vision system which affords an automated analysis of animal movement - honey bee activities in particular. The system is expected to accelerate animal behaviour research which will have implications for the biologically inspired design of robots. A scientist on the project explained that they believe that the language of behaviour is common between animals and robots, so potentially they could for instance videotape like ants for a long period, learn their 'programme' and run it on a robot. He further explained that as social insects such as bees and ants represent the existence of successful, large scale, robust behaviour forged from the interaction of many simple individuals, this can offer ideas on how to organise a cooperating colony of robots capable of complex operations. The new system automates what once was a time consuming and tedious task and the system can be used to analyse data on the sequential movements that encode information. A prime example of this is the honey bee dance that encodes information on food source. On this particular analysis, the team are working with Thomas Seeley* of Cornell University. The analysis system has several components. Firstly, researchers shoot 15 minutes of video footage of bees (some of which are marked. This footage is taken in an observation hive. Then the computer software converts the bees movements into x and y components to determine location information for each bee in each frame. Some segments of this data are hand labelled and used as motion examples for the automated analysis system. Challenges lie ahead though, especially the fact that researchers will have to work out differences between the motor and sensory capabilities of robots and insects. *Professor Thomas Seeley is professor of Biology at Cornell University and is the author of Honeybee Ecology, and Wisdom of the Hive. Both well worth reading. Ed. from Apis UK -- Used by permission :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: -- Visit www.honeybeeworld.com/BEE-L for rules, FAQ and other info --- ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::