Science Engineers Gave a Mushroom a Robot Body And Let It Run Wild


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Nobody knows what sleeping mushrooms dream of when their vast mycelial networks flicker and pulse with electrochemical responses akin to those of our own brain cells.

But given a chance, what might this web of impulses do if granted a moment of freedom?

An interdisciplinary team of researchers from Cornell University in the US and the University of Florence in Italy took steps to find out, putting a culture of the edible mushroom species Pleurotus eryngii (also known as the king oyster mushroom) in control of a pair of vehicles, which can twitch and roll across a flat surface.

Through a series of experiments, the researchers showed it was possible to use the mushroom's electrophysiological activity as a means of translating environmental cues into directives, which could, in turn, be used to drive a mechanical device's movements.

"By growing mycelium into the electronics of a robot, we were able to allow the biohybrid machine to sense and respond to the environment," says senior researcher Rob Shepherd, a materials scientist at Cornell.

Melding meat with machine is nothing new. Evolution has had hundreds of millions of years to fine-tune organic machines, so it's only natural we'd turn to biology for short-cuts on making robust devices that can sense, think, and move how we want.

Surprisingly, the Fungi kingdom is something of an untapped goldmine for cybernetic technology. Easily cultured with relatively simple requirements and a propensity to survive where many other organisms would struggle, molds and mushrooms could provide engineers with a variety of robust living components to suit just about every sensory or even computational need.

Often hidden from view, networks of fine fungal threads respond to changes in their surroundings as they weave through the soil in search of resources. A number of species even crackle with transmembrane activity that resembles our own neural responses, providing researchers with a potential means of eavesdropping on their secret conversations.

By applying algorithms based on the extracellular electrophysiology of P. eryngii mycelia and feeding the output into a microcontroller unit, the researchers used spikes of activity triggered by a stimulus – in this case, UV light – to toggle mechanical responses in two different kinds of mobile device.
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In controlled experiments, the team used the signals from a fungal culture to govern the movements of a five-limbed soft robot and a four-wheeled untethered vehicle.

They were able to influence and override the 'natural' impulses produced by the fungi, demonstrating an ability to harness the system's sensory abilities to meet an end goal.


"This kind of project is not just about controlling a robot," says Cornell bioroboticist Anand Mishra.

"It is also about creating a true connection with the living system. Because once you hear the signal, you also understand what's going on. Maybe that signal is coming from some kind of stresses. So you're seeing the physical response, because those signals we can't visualize, but the robot is making a visualization."

As clumsy as 'roboshroom' might look, the true value of the system may one day be realized in simpler mechanical setups that interpret complex shifts in environmental cues to deliver precise amounts of nutrient or pesticide to a soil environment, or automatically tailor responses to rising levels of pollutant or even react to changes in our own bodies.

There's a deeper wisdom in the whispers of mushrooms we're only just beginning to understand. Given an opportunity, they might even one day tell us what they're dreaming.
 
Here -
They can solve mazes, make decisions and anticipate.
Apologies for the nightmare fuel
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Slime molds can, of their own volition. If you could hook up a way for them to both receive input AND then use that to act and have feedback then it would be very interesting and horrific
I said:
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A gelatinous mass without brain or nervous system, yet motive force, will and memory! Gah!

On the plus side, who knew that Monsters vs. Aliens was an educational movie:




Reminds me of the guy that gave snakes their legs back
Right! That's it.
1725741308929.png1725741308929.png1725741308929.png for everyone!
 
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I know it can't "learn" that it can move itself toward optimal conditions at this point, but it would be neat if it could in time. Even if that is as simple as the region closest to the optimal conditions thriving and biasing the computer by having more activity.
 
They can solve mazes, make decisions and anticipate.
Is the level of thinking of shroom networks or in slime mold like a jellyfish (no consciousness but reflex actions), or is there basic consciousness or beyond?

Either way it's cool there can be something like thinking, without all that complex circulation and metabolism of a mammalian brain.
 
Is the level of thinking of shroom networks or in slime mold like a jellyfish (no consciousness but reflex actions), or is there basic consciousness or beyond?
I dont think anyone knows or even can know. It can anticipate which suggests an ability to deal with time as a concept (or maybe it’s just a simple oscillator…) it’s really interesting because how would we even recognise such ‘other’ intelligence.

Hyper intelligent shade of the colour blue springs to mind
 
something I don't know any animal besides human
Fungi aren't animals nor plants. They are their own kingdom of life in taxonomy.

Plenty of other animals are capable of that, chimps figured out prostitution.

Hang every scientist that's ever taken cordyceps supplements and/or has had psilocybin mushrooms.
I'm no scientist I don't get high-level on stuff really but I do see a lot what seems to be sorta neat middle maybe high school-level concepts or questions taken to the extreme and put into action by people with $$$ and then presented to people as wow you'll never guess what Scientists have discovered!! Maybe this is one of those? Make the readers feel really smart all day thinking about how they totally got it and youknow whut, I bet I could hook up my landscape lights to that mushroom out there. I guess it's a moneymaker. I think there's multiple guys now that just destroy $80000 trucks for clicks and they make money.
Being serious for a moment that's exactly what this is, retarded science-fair bullshit to justify tax-funded grants for assholes.
 
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Tfw the new portobello risotto MRE looks like this
What do 40/k/?
I love that 40K orks are essentially fungus. At a stroke, GW came up with a way to justify re-attaching limbs by holding them in place long enough, having an entire species that was exclusively male, explained how ork infestations could spring up seemingly out of nowhere and were so hard to get rid of for good, how you had smaller related species of gretchen and snotlings that emerged first, and how you could have related species that they used (squigs) just appear alongside them even in a completely novel ecoysystem. Hell, you can even use the fungus thing to wangle in a bit of genetic memory for them to explain why they can naturally develop the same language and tech wherever they arise. Genius, really.

I also love that the species has "hair squigs" which are essentially excessively hairy caterpillars with a natural tendency to cling onto things that an ork can use as a toupe. But that's kind of unrelated.
 
I love that 40K orks are essentially fungus. At a stroke, GW came up with a way to justify re-attaching limbs by holding them in place long enough, having an entire species that was exclusively male, explained how ork infestations could spring up seemingly out of nowhere and were so hard to get rid of for good, how you had smaller related species of gretchen and snotlings that emerged first, and how you could have related species that they used (squigs) just appear alongside them even in a completely novel ecoysystem. Hell, you can even use the fungus thing to wangle in a bit of genetic memory for them to explain why they can naturally develop the same language and tech wherever they arise. Genius, really.

I also love that the species has "hair squigs" which are essentially excessively hairy caterpillars with a natural tendency to cling onto things that an ork can use as a toupe. But that's kind of unrelated.
Tbh they are actually quite weak
Case in point.1000066255.jpg
 
You give me way too much credit.

Preface: I'm kind of retarded and more than a little weird. I worry about odd shit

There are rather interesting papers regarding the intelligence of fungi. The one I linked is not the only scientific paper, and there are several popular science articles to be found if you Google "fungi intelligence." It suffices to say that these organisms are weird, they have a real and natural intelligence, and they ought to be studied before we start giving them cyborg bodies and training them in a lab.

Further, there are interesting studies indicating that slime molds also have intelligence and decision-making capabilities. While these are very different than fungi (slime molds are not even in the same kingdom), it's still fucking weird and presents the same concerns as above.

I really don't think it's a good idea to let engineers play with and rapidly develop so many potentially powerful toys - AI and living organisms with actual, natural intelligence that we do not understand.

I'm not saying that we'll all be under the tyrannical foot of mushroom cyborgs in 20 years (although that would be a cool science fiction novel). However, these questions ought to be asked for safety and ethical concerns.
ffs its a mushroom, might as well be scared the common house fly in your room is observing you in your sleep, schizo
 
Here -
They can solve mazes, make decisions and anticipate.
Apologies for the nightmare fuel
This article is completely anthropomorphizing how slime mold works. Slime molds don't hold the ability to make decisions, what happens is the mold grows in every direction of the maze, then once the entire surface is covered it reabsorbs all of itself but the shorter routes. It's similar to claiming that water is smart because it navigated itself around obstacles and found the shortest path to the sea.
 
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