Radhika Nagpal: What intelligent machines can learn from a school of fish
Taking cues from bottom-up biological networks like those of social insects, Radhika Nagpal helped design an unprecedented “swarm” of ant-like robots. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
off the coast of the Bahamas.
in the ocean before,
as I put my head in the water
to breathe through the snorkel,
of striped yellow and black fish
suddenly changed its mind,
and then swerved to the right
have had this experience.
and the beauty of it,
just the sheer oneness of it,
with a single collective mind
really ended up determining
is artificial intelligence.
by creating our own computational systems
the way we see it in nature.
come from science fiction and the movies,
view of intelligence.
kind of intelligence.
of the collective,
and myopic view of what's going on,
isn't really about the individual
of the group itself.
that I still find most remarkable,
supervising this fish school.
collective mind behavior
of one fish and another.
or rules of engagement
that lead to this kind of intelligence,
that I work on with my team in my lab.
the mathematics behind it.
working closely with experimentalists.
our own collective systems
that we see in nature,
along this line
of a thousand robots.
to exhibit collective intelligence,
about the size of a quarter,
communicate with other robots,
exactly an interaction,
different kinds of rules of engagement
spontaneous synchronization,
and suddenly start all clapping together,
for pattern formation,
they're going to take on
from nature's rules.
that we've learned from nature
entirely new collective behaviors
two different kinds of rules.
around other stationary robots.
based on its two nearest neighbors.
in a little pattern seed,
are sufficient for the group
a simple line pattern.
complicated pattern rules,
really complicated self assemblies,
a thousand robots
to self-assemble the letter K.
is that no one is in charge.
to a small number of robots nearby it,
to move around the half-built structure
based on its pattern rules.
is doing anything perfectly,
the collective to do its goal
almost so perfect, you know --
that they're individual robots at all,
in two dimensions,
and rules in three dimensions.
that could build together?
from social insects.
mound-building termites
complex nest structures out of mud
also have pattern rules
out of other insects,
to create rules for robots.
some simulated robots.
through the structure,
where it looks at groups of blocks
and the right pattern rules,
to build whatever we want.
their own tower.
that go with these rules.
that can climb over blocks,
the very structure that it's on.
that you could imagine.
many different kinds of robot bodies.
that maybe could move sandbags
that built out of soft materials
to shore up a collapsed building --
in different kinds of bodies.
obsessed with army ants,
that can climb over literally anything
out of their own bodies.
of robot visions become possible.
about the rules that fish schools use.
the bodies to go with that,
with a fish school of our own creation.
the mathematical and the conceptual tools
of collective power,
of future applications,
that build flood barriers
that could pollinate crops
that monitor coral reefs,
and we thinking about programming
how to design the rules of engagement
good collective behavior
rules for insects and for fish
to our own human collective?
that I'd like to leave you with
of collective intelligence,
fish schools that I study,
evolutionary path to walk.
the science of robot collectives,
and thinking about rules
our own scientific collective.
determines what science gets done.
that they could stand here
not just to understand but to change
impacts their everyday lives.
our own human collective,
it will be beautiful.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Radhika Nagpal - Robotics engineerTaking cues from bottom-up biological networks like those of social insects, Radhika Nagpal helped design an unprecedented “swarm” of ant-like robots.
Why you should listen
With a swarm of 1,024 robots inspired by the design of ant colonies, Radhika Nagpal and her colleagues at Harvard’s SSR research group have redefined expectations for self-organizing robotic systems. Guided by algorithms, Nagpal’s shockingly simple robots guide themselves into a variety of shapes -- an ability that, brought to scale, might lead to applications like disaster rescue, space exploration and beyond.
In addition to her work with biologically inspired robots, Nagpal helped create ROOT, a simple robot to teach coding to would-be programmers through a simple user interface suitable for students of all ages.
Radhika Nagpal | Speaker | TED.com