Does the Octopus Hold the Key To Robot Design? 347
balancedi writes "Simultaneously controling 8 jointless arms without getting them all tangled up is a neat trick that octopuses do with ease. According to a National Geographic article several researchers from around the world think understanding the octopus holds to key to the optimal robot design."
True Story: (Score:5, Interesting)
This part of the linked article rang very true for me.
True story:
Octopus are underrated. Seriously. I used to have an (Octopus bimaculoides) [utmb.edu] as a pet (her name was Cephus, short for Cephalopod) and I was always amazed at the intelligence and problem solving abilities she exhibited. One day I was returning from working all night at the sleep lab followed by a day of class. I had a new bag of goldfish to feed her and placed them in the "goldfish tank" across the table from her 100gal aquarium. She always got excited at that and would hang on the side of her tank and look at the goldfish. At any rate, I got a couple hours of sleep and then ran back to work for another all night shift. Upon stumbling back home the next day, I was stunned to find no goldfish in the goldfish tank! I did not know if I was just seriously sleep deprived or what, but closer inspection revealed goldfish scales floating around in Cephus's tank........and a trail of dried salt water on the table top from her tank to the goldfish tank. She had opened the top of her tank, navigated across the table to the goldfish tank, helped herself to every last goldfish in the goldfish tank and then crawled back home, closing the top of her tank! All I could do was stare in dumbfounded amazement.
She also exhibited curiosity with new objects placed into her tank, exploring them extensively, and I must admit, it is most interesting in that unlike other aquatic non mammalians.....when you looked into an octopus eye, they look back at you. There is something absolutely intelligent behind those eyes.
Re:True Story: (Score:2, Interesting)
3 brains...
So, could we say that 8(arms)=2^3(brains) ???
Re:True Story: (Score:2, Interesting)
How would I go about getting an octopus? Are they expensive?
I've heard similar stories, that they are really quite intelligent.
Re:True Story: (Score:5, Informative)
Also octopus only live a year so they aren't the best pets if you grow attached.
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
Haha, you think you are smart Mr. Octopus? Come back and tell me about it next year!
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:True Story: (Score:3, Funny)
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Re:True Story: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
However a salt-water setup suitable for it is going to cost you (unless you have that already, you did say you were into fish)
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
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Re:True Story: (Score:3, Insightful)
Please leave the octopuses, lizards, snakes, iguanas, guacamayas, cacatuas, monkeys and others where they belong.
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
Re:True Story: (Score:3, Insightful)
Sorry, but that doesn't make a damn bit of sense. It's either right or it's wrong to have an animal as a pet. You can't say "oh well our ancestors made these animals pets so they're okay."
If our ancestors had your attitude, we wouldn't have dogs, cats, cows, pigs, donkeys, horses, chickens, etc., as we k
Re:True Story: (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't think this carries over to farm animals simply because we kill and eat them! Maybe the animals
Re:True Story: (Score:3, Interesting)
I've got a few good ideas- but they both drive the free traitors and the libertarians crazy:
Limit beef in the United States to be sold to the consumer within the state where it was raised- no interstate beef shipments, no cheap labor states competing with expensive labor states, no huge factories in the midwest selling to the big cities on the coasts.
Cut farm subsidies for any company/farm that exports outsid
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:True Story: (Score:5, Informative)
She died of old age. When I got her, I had found her on my SCUBA tank after we had returned home. She was soooo tiny (about the size of my thumbnail), and we were miles away from the ocean by that time. I did not want her to die, so we mixed up some artificial sea water and I carried her home to place her in a 100gal aquarium I had. Fed her with feeder goldfish, but clams and crabs purchased from the local pet store was what she really enjoyed. She lived about two years (which is very good for an octopus), grew to about 13 inches and finally died from old age.
Re:True Story: (Score:3, Interesting)
Did Cephus show any signs of being able to identify you personally? Did she ever react to you in a special way (i.e. letting you hold her)?
I think the real reason I'm asking is that you seem to hold Cephus in really high regard. I was wondering if that was because she was simply interesting, or if it's because there was a bit of a bond there?
Re:True Story: (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes. She would change color when I came into the room or house and would always move to the top of the tank. I could reach into the tank and she would reach out and grab my fingers/hand. When others would enter the room, she often hid.
I think the real reason I'm asking is that you seem to hold Cephus in really high regard.
It was an educational experience that I will never forget. I've seen sharks and other fish in the ocean, and with the exception of dolphins, whales, seals, and the octopus, I've never seen signs of intelligence. The other aspect of the octopus is that they are so otherworldly in appearance and behavior. Changing colors/textures, curiosity, excellent vision, preferences for things they like and dislike..... It is as close as most of us will ever come to meeting an alien.
Re:True Story: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:True Story: (Score:3, Informative)
From Wikipedia:
A note on the plural form: Fowler's Modern English Usage states that "the only acceptable plural in English is octopuses", and that octopi is misconceived and octopodes pedantic. The Oxford English Dictionary lists octo
Next In the News (Score:5, Funny)
Next in the news:
Re:True Story: (Score:5, Interesting)
I agree, probably one of the most underrated animals.
Yes, Indeed. (Score:2, Funny)
OH darn, I'm drying up. I better go back to my tank.
*plop*
Re:True Story: (Score:4, Funny)
Proving not only that octopi are clever problem-solvers, but that they can remain clever problem solvers despite drinking like fish?
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
For a second there, I thought you were gonna say Bocephus [hankjr.com].
Re:True Story: (Score:5, Interesting)
They say the large octopus has an intelligence equivalent to a housecat. Perhaps we don't relate to the intelligence of these creatures (ie, find it surprising when they demonstrate intelligent behavior) because we don't interact with them on a daily basis. I never think twice about the intelligence of my cats because they're so common. I'll tell you, though... I started thinking twice about eating "grilled octopus" at the local restaurant after finding out just how smart they are.
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
I hate these animal intelligence equivalency metaphors. Of course, it's good to a point - it tells Joe Blow that an Octopus is not a soft, dumb crab. But, octopuses excel at figuring out mazes, picking locks, escaping cages, and most importantly hiding evidence of this from their keepers.
I've never met a cat that cared two licks about any other sentient create around it, including cats. (I think they care about one lick). I honestly
Re:True Story: (Score:3, Interesting)
I was diving at a site over in spain and I was chatting to a few of the local divers I'd already dived their a couple of times already that season, they started joking about looking out for the octopi that lived in the area and to not let them get too close.
Fair enough thought I, so I got kitted up entered the water and was looking for these octopi when I see one so I go and have a nice close look. Not to close thought I next thing I know it'
Re:True Story: (Score:4, Interesting)
Here's a video [ngcomputerhelp.com] of an octopus attacking a crab
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
Wow.. that was a LOT like watching Oz...
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
Heh!
When I was a kid I saw video of a dude that put a crab into a mason jar, screwed the lid, and put it in the tank with an octopus. The thing worked on it for a bit, then wrapped it's tentacles around the lid, did a surprising spinny trick, and feasted on crab. I got in trouble with my mom for shoutin
Re:True Story: (Score:2)
LOL! Yes indeed that is pretty much the same thing I said when I saw my first octopus attack its prey by circling around behind a rock and attack from behind after showing itself to the prey from the front. Strategy! shows logic and an understanding of action and consequence.
By the way, I would like to see that footage. Is it available on the Internet?
Re:True Story: (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:True Story: (Score:2)
Get a new octopus every 6 months. Put the new octopus in with the old octopus, and see if the old one teaches the new one any tricks.
Re:True Story: (Score:5, Funny)
Real question (Score:5, Funny)
Even deeper question is, in which arm?
I'm no ichthyologist (Score:4, Funny)
Unless they think that making robots taste delicious is the secret to robot movement. Mmm... octopod
I'm no etymologist (Score:3, Informative)
Good ol' dictionary.com [reference.com] does list "octopods", but that seems like a generic term for any eight-legged creature, not incorrect for an octopus but not specific either.
(Mostly OT anecdote: When my older sister first called to announce her engagement to a quadriplegic, my mother, startled, turned to the rest of us and announced, "Nancy's going to marry a quadraped!"
(We speculated furiously until she hung up and explained-- a dog, per
Re:I'm no etymologist (Score:2)
I was about to suggest that everyone who marries a human marries a quadraped, but then I realized that the word I was thinking of was tetrapod.
And thus, this entire comment is pointless. Happy Friday!
Of course, this is old news... to Spiderman 2 fans (Score:5, Funny)
My prediction: Slashdot article in the near future about the possibility of armored soldiers riding anti-gravity sleds pumped up with performance-enhancing drugs.
And Now... (Score:3, Funny)
oh, wait...nevermind...
So, make slimy and slippery robots. Got it. (Score:5, Insightful)
What do you think hair conditioner does? It mostly lubricates the hair strands so it won't get traction and kink up onto other strands.
Are we going to build tentacle robots that are oozing oil along their smooth plasticene actuators? I think I've seen a few Japanese cartoons along this motif...
Re:So, make slimy and slippery robots. Got it. (Score:2, Insightful)
So basically the head says move and the legs figure out for themselves how to do it.
Re:So, make slimy and slippery robots. Got it. (Score:5, Funny)
That sounds a lot like the perfect date.
Re:So, make slimy and slippery robots. Got it. (Score:2)
Re:So, make slimy and slippery robots. Got it. (Score:2)
Octopus? Are they serious? (Score:5, Funny)
Somebody warn them before it's too late!
Mod Parent Down! (Score:2)
That kind of inaccuracy should be unacceptable in these scientific circles.
DOC OC! (Score:3, Funny)
If they go down this path, it is obvious that Marvel Comics' world domination plans will be complete! They will simply use intellectual property lawsuits [wired.com] based on the Doctor Octopus character... oh Stan Lee, what evil hast thou wrought?
Re:Octopus? Are they serious? (Score:2)
Each creature has several 'brains' (Score:5, Interesting)
In that the octopus has a brain hierarchy. The central brain sends a 'go get that food' command to a sub brain in the tentacle which executes commands in the completion of that goal on its own. The main brain doesn't have to think about controlling the mechanics of each arm.
Re:Each creature has several 'brains' (Score:2)
Re:Each creature has several 'brains' (Score:2)
Fricken homework...
Re:Each creature has several 'brains' (Score:3, Funny)
Urban myth amongst animal behavioural psychologist (Score:5, Interesting)
A friend who is a throbbing-brained molecular biologist, with a PhD and everything :), told me this after too many pints of beer.
He was told by the guy from the next lab over, at lunch, who'd heard it from someone in another lab at a party,...
Some behavioural psychologists - I may have their precise taxonomic appellation incorrect - were planning an experiment with an octopus. They had a large maze, constructed of perspex. At one end was the octopus, at the other some food. The idea was just to time how long it took to navigate the maze and get to the food, which different routes it explored and so on. Well, they spent a long day setting everything up, getting the measuring fu in place and so forth. At the end of the day's work, the experiment was ready to run; they'd even connected the aquarium tank with a nice fresh octopus up to the maze equipment. The plan was to unlock the little hatch and give the octupus free access to the maze the following morning.
So they come in bright and early the next day to find the food gone, the octopus fed, and the little hatchway re-locked from the inside...
Octi Movement (Score:5, Informative)
If you ever get down the the Aquarium of the Americas you can get a pretty good display of this. Just make sure you make it for one of the feeding times 'cause the feeders do all the classic Octopus tricks(fish in a bottle, fish in a tank, fish with mirrors, mazes, etc).
Political Correctness gone too far (Score:5, Funny)
Re: Does the Octopus Hold the Key To Robot Design? (Score:5, Funny)
Pat on the back (Score:2)
Octopus Holds the Key to Robot Design? (Score:5, Funny)
Now whack it over the head and take it from him. We've been looking for that.
Damn octopi...
All I can say is... (Score:5, Funny)
I could be wrong... (Score:2, Insightful)
Don'[t be ridiculous (Score:2)
DUH.
Re:I could be wrong... (Score:5, Insightful)
But, since octopus is actually an English word (regardless of where we got it from -- we borrow words, not grammar structures), it takes the regular plural of all English words that end in an -s, -es.
C'mon. Is the plural of sauna saunaa or saunat? A lot of our words come from other languages. If we have to adopt their pluarlization rules, that would be a nightmare laundry list of irregular plurals.
Re:I could be wrong... (Score:2)
Re:I could be wrong... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I could be wrong... (Score:2)
The only acceptable plural of octopus is therefore octouses.
Linky [etymonline.com]
Re:I could be wrong... (Score:2)
Next you're going to tell me that anyone who uses the word "automobile" is wrong, because that word cannot possibly exist. Or that if I write about Plato instead of Platon, I'm no longer talking about a Greek philosopher. Sorry, but your pedantic obsession with etymology has no bearing on correct English usage.
Re:I could be wrong... (Score:2)
Maybe "octopxvi" would be better - to emphasize that a plurarility of said animals (*) have at least 16 arms, unless some have been bitten off - but that's hardish to pronounce.
(*) I wrote^H^H^H^H^Hread too many software patent applications recently, and it shows up in my posting; really sorry 'bout that.
Obligatory "Mystery Men" Quote (Score:2, Funny)
Mystery Men [wikiquote.org]
Nature==Free Engineering Lessons (Score:4, Interesting)
Nature has already solved many a problem (with some flaws like any solution). It's bad enough to reinvent the wheel. It's worse to reinvent something even more complex.
The sad part is wondering what else is out there that isn't being studied because we didn't think of it yet.
Re:Nature==Free Engineering Lessons (Score:2)
So they have multiple cerebellums? (Score:2, Insightful)
Interesting. This seems somewhat like the honda robot Asimo, in that Asimo also doesn't have just a single "brain" but rather a single primary processing unit and smaller controller units for each of his joints.
Duh! (Score:2)
need I say it? (Score:2)
Sounds like good management or OO encapsulation (Score:4, Insightful)
Sounds like good management to me. Management (the octopus) assigns a task to one of their reports (arms). Tell them what to do, but don't micromanage the task.
Or, it sounds like encapsulation. Pass just enough information to the Arm object to communicate the task, and allow Arm's private methods handle the detals of how that task is accomplished.
The Tentacle (Score:4, Funny)
Plural forms? (Score:5, Informative)
Lesson [upenn.edu] on the correct plural version of Octopus. Very interesting read.
Octopus Robot Arms (Score:2)
See for yourself [jsonline.com]
Key to robot design: has to be alive. (Score:3, Insightful)
Octopus (Score:4, Funny)
Mixed messages (Score:5, Funny)
Octopuses have intrigued scientists for years, because they have both long- and short-term memory, they remember solutions to problems, and they can go on to solve the same or similar problems. They have been known to climb aboard fishing boats and open holds in search of crabs. They can figure out mazes, open jars, and break out of their aquariums in search of food.
It was a bit disheartening to see this "sponsored link" at the bottom of the article:
A Seafood Delicacy: Order Octopus
Gorton's Fresh Seafood delivers octopus - fully cleaned and freshly prepared. Delicious and mild in flavor - great boiled, stewed or grilled. Special packaging ensures freshness.
Ah, the potential irony of keyword triggered ads!
forming three segments? (Score:3, Interesting)
Just as a human arm has joints at the shoulder, elbow, and wrist that allow our arms to bend and rotate, the octopus bends its arm to forming three segments of roughly equal length.
i wonder how roughly equal the segments were. it would be interesting to know if the difference in lengths correspond to the golden mean, ie coreespond to how our limbs are organized.
(from google) the golden ratio = 1.61803399
Science Meets Science Fiction! (Score:2)
The two immediate pictures that come to mind are Doc Ock from Spiderman II and those crazy Sentinels in the Matrix trilogy. I'm not sure if this is the "Jules Verne/Arthur C. Clark" Effect but maybe there's a pattern here...
Nature's wonders observed and mimicked in fantasy and then made reality in technology. Hmmm.
octopus intelligence overrated (Score:2)
OTS summary of the article (Score:2)
Pet an octopus (Score:5, Funny)
"It can be intimidating at first, because they wrap their arms pretty tight around you, and everything they latch onto is pretty much headed straight to their mouth"..."But once you get used to it, I can't describe it: They feel like wet velvet or wet silk."
Sounds pretty obscene without the first sentence, doesn't it?
Neural Memory (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:suckers (Score:2)
Re:Here's a thought... (Score:3, Funny)
That is probably what the octopus was thinking.
Re:According to the article... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Octopuses???? Or Octopi ? (Score:3, Informative)