3 April 2014
We move faster and faster into the future. Every day, we meet an
endless stream of terms and phrases that have suddenly appeared to
describe the new, the amazing and, sometimes, the almost indescribable.
Biorobotics is a word with a problem. No one has decided exactly what
it is or what it isn’t. For sure, it’s used to describe three things.
First, biorobotics is the study and practice of making robots that imitate biological organisms. Robots like Boston Dynamics’ Big Dog, UMD Robotics’ Robo-Raven, or ROBOTNOR’s Wheeko the robotic snake are all examples of biorobotics.
But some biorobotic devices imitate things as small as, or smaller
than, living cells. Imagine being able to build small robotic devices,
or “nano” robots, that could be injected into a person’s bloodstream.
These tiny robots would be designed to work like super antibiotics.
Once inside the body, these nano robots could cure infections almost
instantly. Other nano robots of the same kind could clear clogged blood
veins or even repair damaged blood vessels. These tiny ‘bots could allow
a person to live years longer.
Second, biorobotics includes what is sometimes
called “bionics.” The word bionics is now used to describe the study
of how to integrate mechanical robotics into human beings — like TV’s Six Million Dollar Man.
When mechanical devices are actually used to replace or improve the
function of human organs, the result is a “cyborg.” Technically,
something as simple as a heart patient’s pacemaker makes the user and
device, together, into a cyborg.
WIKIPEDIA: Six Million Dollar Man
Third, biorobotics also is used to
describe to the study of genetic engineering. This has little to do with
machines, mechanics or devices. Instead, genetic engineering is the
actual design and development of new and unique living organisms. This
requires an understanding of genetic material, DNA. This, also,
requires a very precise technology for arranging DNA “parts” it into new
patterns or designs to produce new life forms or old life forms with
new and different characteristics. No one is able to genetically
engineer even small life forms at this time. But researchers are
working toward that goal. As a gardener, I would look forward to a
really, really blue rose. (The roses on the market now that are called “blue” are actually sort of purple).
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