Delcomyn Fred
Department of Entomology, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA.
Annu Rev Entomol. 2004;49:51-70. doi: 10.1146/annurev.ento.49.061802.123257.
With the advent of significant collaborations between researchers who study insect walking and robotics engineers interested in constructing adaptive legged robots, insect walking is once again poised to make a more significant scientific contribution than the numbers of participants in the field might suggest. This review outlines current knowledge of the physiological basis of insect walking with an emphasis on recent new developments in biomechanics and genetic dissection of behavior, and the impact this knowledge is having on robotics. Engineers have begun to team with neurobiologists to build walking robots whose physical design and functional control are based on insect biology. Such an approach may have benefits for engineering, by leading to the construction of better-performing robots, and for biology, by allowing real-time and real-world tests of critical hypotheses about how locomotor control is effected. It is argued that in order for the new field of biorobotics to have significant influence it must adopt criteria for performance and an experimental approach to the development of walking robots.
随着研究昆虫行走的科研人员与有志于构建适应性有腿机器人的机器人工程师之间展开重要合作,昆虫行走再度有望做出比该领域参与者数量所显示的更为重大的科学贡献。本综述概述了昆虫行走生理基础的当前知识,重点关注生物力学和行为基因剖析方面的最新进展,以及这些知识对机器人技术的影响。工程师们已开始与神经生物学家合作,打造物理设计和功能控制基于昆虫生物学的行走机器人。这种方法可能对工程学有益,可带来性能更优的机器人,对生物学也有益,能对有关运动控制如何实现的关键假设进行实时和现实世界的测试。有人认为,为使生物机器人学这一新领域产生重大影响,它必须采用性能标准以及行走机器人开发的实验方法。