Feed Me: Robotic Infiltration of Poison Frog Families

05/23/2023
by   Tony G. Chen, et al.
0

We present the design and operation of tadpole-mimetic robots prepared for a study of the parenting behaviors of poison frogs, which pair bond and raise their offspring. The mission of these robots is to convince poison frog parents that they are tadpoles, which need to be fed. Tadpoles indicate this need, at least in part, by wriggling with a characteristic frequency and amplitude. While the study is in progress, preliminary indications are that the TadBots have passed their test, at least for father frogs. We discuss the design and operational requirements for producing convincing TadBots and provide some details of the study design and plans for future work.

READ FULL TEXT
research
04/19/2019

Secure and secret cooperation of robotic swarms by using Merkle trees

Swarm robotics systems are envisioned to become an important component o...
research
12/21/2022

Can a Robot Shoot an Olympic Recurve Bow? A preliminary study

The field of robotics, and more especially humanoid robotics, has severa...
research
10/20/2022

Designing ReachBot: System Design Process with a Case Study of a Martian Lava Tube Mission

In this paper we present a trade study-based method to optimize the arch...
research
09/09/2019

Recognizing Human Internal States: A Conceptor-Based Approach

The past few decades has seen increased interest in the application of s...
research
09/02/2020

Secure Encoded Instruction Graphs for End-to-End Data Validation in Autonomous Robots

As autonomous robots become increasingly ubiquitous, more attention is b...
research
01/15/2018

Robots as Powerful Allies for the Study of Embodied Cognition from the Bottom Up

A large body of compelling evidence has been accumulated demonstrating t...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset