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Why are Some Fish Natural Piscine Leaders?

How a biomimetic robotic fish becomes a leader of live fish.

By Report David Alderton | March 5, 2012

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biometric fish

The basic biomimetic robotic fish. (Photo credit: Polytechnic Institute of New York University (NYU-Poly).

New research investigating what characteristics make a leader among schooling fish has had a surprising outcome. The scientists involved have discovered that by mimicking nature, so a robotic fish can be transformed into a leader of a school of live fish!

Through a series of experiments, researchers from Polytechnic Institute of New York University (NYU-Poly) aimed to increase understanding of collective animal behavior, including learning how robots might someday steer fish away from environmental disasters. Nature is a growing source of inspiration for engineers, and the researchers were intrigued to find that their biomimetic robotic fish could not only infiltrate and be accepted by their living companions, but they could actually assume a leadership role.

Stefano Marras, at the time a postdoctoral fellow in mechanical engineering at NYU-Poly and currently a researcher at Italy's Institute for the Marine and Coastal Environment-National Research Council, along with co-researcher Maurizio Porfiri, NYU-Poly associate professor of mechanical engineering, found conditions that induced golden shiners to follow in the wake of the biomimetic robot fish, taking advantage of the energy savings generated by the robot.

Leadership Ability
The researchers designed their bio-inspired robotic fish to mimic the tail propulsion of a swimming fish, and conducted experiments at varying tail beat frequencies and flow speeds. In nature, fish positioned at the front of a school beat their tails with greater frequency, creating a wake in which their followers gather. The followers display a notably slower frequency of tail movement, leading researchers to believe that the followers are enjoying a hydrodynamic advantage from the leaders' efforts.

In an attempt to create a robotic leader, Marras and Porfiri placed their robot in a water tunnel with a school of golden shiners. First, they allowed the robot to remain still, and unsurprisingly, the "dummy" fish attracted little attention. When the robot simulated the familiar tail movement of a leader fish, however, members of the school assumed the behavior patterns they exhibit in the wild, slowing their tails and following the robotic leader, in spite of its obvious difference in appearance.

Safeguarding Individuals in a Crisis
"These experiments may open up new channels for us to explore the possibilities for robotic interactions with live animals - an area that is largely untapped," explained Porfiri. "By looking to nature to guide our design, and creating robots that tap into animals' natural cues, we may be able to influence collective animal behavior to aid environmental conservation and disaster recovery efforts."

The researchers believe that robotic leaders could possibly help lead fish and other wildlife that behave collectively - including birds - away from toxic situations such as oil or chemical spills or human-made dangers such as dams. Other experimenters have achieved success in prompting wildlife to move using non-living attractants, but Marras and Porfiri believe this is the first time that anyone has used biomimetics to such effect.

Reference: Stefano Marras and Maurizio Porfiri. Fish and robots swimming together: attraction towards the robot demands biomimetic locomotion. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 2012 DOI: 10.1098/u200Brsif.2012.0084

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Why are Some Fish Natural Piscine Leaders?

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Reader Comments

CaveCarp    Springfield, IL

5/30/2012 6:24:58 AM

Fascinating article!

Saundra    Los Angeles, CA

4/26/2012 7:17:22 AM

Robots are so cool.

Garrett    Prunedale, CA

3/13/2012 11:42:38 AM

cool

Jose    Maywood, NJ

3/10/2012 8:58:04 PM

Wow this is really cool stuff !!

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