Self-assembling machines

Categories:
Somehow related:
Recent articles:

Please install Flash® and turn on Javascript.

Bring me home, please

The M-TRAN II robot, developed by the Japanese Distributed Systems Design Research Group, is made up of a dozen of modules. Each contains two blocks linked to each other. Each block can rotate 180 degrees around the link that connects it to its mate, and each module contains a magnet that can be switched on and off, enabling it to connect to other modules in the system.

araignnnne.jpg exp4legsRot[1].jpg

The modules can rearrange themselves into countless different shapes and create different patterns of movement. M-TRAN can configure itself to march on four legs, shape-shift into a long string of modules that slithers across the floor like a snake, or it can pull itself into a wheel and roll or creep along the ground with its legs splayed out like a spider’s. The robot can even evolve a new walking strategy if it looses one module.

The possibilities are so immense that many of M-TRAN’s patterns of motion aren’t designed directly by human programmers. Genetic algorithms allow the robot to discover new ways of moving on its own. The M-TRAN computer cycles through possible patterns of motion, selecting the most promising ones, sampling their effectiveness, making further selections till the software evolves a new pattern that the robot can adopt.

Future uses for M-TRAN’s descendants include space rovers or deep-sea probes, as well as explorers in unknown or complicated environments, looking for people under debris or fixing leaky valves in polluted areas, such as nuclear plants.

Video.
Via CLippings < Discover.
Related: ATRON, the multi-molecular shape-shifting robot, other shape-shifting robots.

4 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Self-assembling machines.

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi/3514

» Transformers! from we hope that you choke.

Well, sort of like Transformers... A Japanese research group has developed a machine that can change its shape and adapt to its surroundings to help itself better maneuver through difficult-to-maneuver environments. It can be a caterpillar, a snake, a... Read More

» Self-assembling Machines from RobotSkirts

I remember seeing computer simulation where a random group of polygons were given some intelligence so that they could teach themselves how "walk". wmmna has the story on a set of robot buillding blocks that pull off the same trick. Each of the joint... Read More

» Self-Assembling Machines from TeamDroid

This is not just your normal little walking robot. It uses genetic algorithms to discover new ways of moving on its own. Self-assembling machines Read More

Distributed Systems Design Research Group have developed M-TRAN II, an incredible modular robot, capable of self-assembly and transformations as it uses GA (genetic algorithms) to generate new methods of locomotion. Watch the video [mpg 24.9mb] [... Read More

Sponsored by:

sponsored by: