
THOUGH not famed for their intellect, single-celled organisms have already demonstrated a surprising degree of intelligence. Now a team at the University of the West of England (UWE) has secured 拢228,000 in funding to turn these organisms into engineering robots.
In recent years, single-celled organisms have been used to control six-legged robots, but Andrew Adamatzky at UWE wants to go one step further by making a complete 鈥渞obot鈥 out of a plasmodium slime mould, , a commonly occurring mould that moves towards food sources such as bacteria and fungi, and shies away from light.
Affectionately dubbed Plasmobot, it will be 鈥減rogrammed鈥 using light and electromagnetic stimuli to trigger chemical reactions similar to a complex piece of chemistry called the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction, which Adamatzky previously used to build liquid logic gates for a synthetic brain. By understanding and manipulating these reactions, says Adamatzky, it should be possible to program Plasmobot to move in certain ways, to 鈥減ick up鈥 objects by engulfing them and even assemble them.
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鈥淚t should be possible to program it to move, to pick up objects and even assemble them鈥
Initially, Plasmobot will work with and manipulate tiny pieces of foam, because they 鈥渆asily float on the slime鈥, says Adamatzky. The long-term aim is to use such robots to help assemble the components of micromachines, he says.