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1.
Front Robot AI ; 10: 1145798, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37920863

ABSTRACT

We live in a time of unprecedented scientific and human progress while being increasingly aware of its negative impacts on our planet's health. Aerial, terrestrial, and aquatic ecosystems have significantly declined putting us on course to a sixth mass extinction event. Nonetheless, the advances made in science, engineering, and technology have given us the opportunity to reverse some of our ecosystem damage and preserve them through conservation efforts around the world. However, current conservation efforts are primarily human led with assistance from conventional robotic systems which limit their scope and effectiveness, along with negatively impacting the surroundings. In this perspective, we present the field of bioinspired robotics to develop versatile agents for future conservation efforts that can operate in the natural environment while minimizing the disturbance/impact to its inhabitants and the environment's natural state. We provide an operational and environmental framework that should be considered while developing bioinspired robots for conservation. These considerations go beyond addressing the challenges of human-led conservation efforts and leverage the advancements in the field of materials, intelligence, and energy harvesting, to make bioinspired robots move and sense like animals. In doing so, it makes bioinspired robots an attractive, non-invasive, sustainable, and effective conservation tool for exploration, data collection, intervention, and maintenance tasks. Finally, we discuss the development of bioinspired robots in the context of collaboration, practicality, and applicability that would ensure their further development and widespread use to protect and preserve our natural world.

2.
Bioinspir Biomim ; 15(5): 055004, 2020 07 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32454476

ABSTRACT

In aquatic pedestrian locomotion the dynamics of terrestrial and aquatic environments are coupled. Here we study terrestrial running and aquatic punting locomotion of the marine-living crab Pachygrapsus marmoratus. We detected both active and passive phases of running and punting through the observation of crab locomotory behaviour in standardized settings and by three-dimensional kinematic analysis of its dynamic gaits using high-speed video cameras. Variations in different stride parameters were studied and compared. The comparison was done based on the dimensionless parameter the Froude number (Fr) to account for the effect of buoyancy and size variability among the crabs. The underwater spring-loaded inverted pendulum (USLIP) model better fitted the dynamics of aquatic punting. USLIP takes account of the damping effect of the aquatic environment, a variable not considered by the spring-loaded inverted pendulum (SLIP) model in reduced gravity. Our results highlight the underlying principles of aquatic terrestrial locomotion by comparing it with terrestrial locomotion. Comparing punting with running, we show and increased stride period, decreased duty cycle and orientation of the carapace more inclined with the horizontal plane, indicating the significance of fluid forces on the dynamics due to the aquatic environment. Moreover, we discovered periodicity in punting locomotion of crabs and two different gaits, namely, long-flight punting and short-flight punting, distinguished by both footfall patterns and kinematic parameters. The generic fundamental model which belongs to all animals performing both terrestrial and aquatic legged locomotion has implications for control strategies, evolution and translation to robotic artefacts.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal , Brachyura/physiology , Locomotion/physiology , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Gait , Models, Biological , Orientation, Spatial , Robotics/methods , Running/physiology
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