Researchers study animal behavior through mechanical doppelgangers
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.05.2008 at 9:12 am
To learn more about how animals communicate, researchers are developing robotic copies capable of signaling real-world creatures, then analyzing how the non-battery-powered respond. Most recently, Hampshire College researcher Sarah Partan, for example, has been working with a mechanical squirrel she calls Rocky.
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