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Fruit bat's echolocation may work like sophisticated surveillance sonar

New research from the University of Washington suggests that the Egyptian fruit bat is using similar techniques to those preferred by modern-day military and civil surveillance. The results could inspire new directions for driverless cars and drones.

The new open-access paper in PLoS Biology shows how the animals are able to navigate using a different system...

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Robotic fish can 'see' and mimic live fish

For more than a decade, biomimetic robots have been deployed alongside live animals to better understand the drivers of animal behavior, including social cues, fear, leadership, and even courtship. The encounters have always been unidirectional; the animals observe and respond to the robots. But in the lab of Maurizio Porfiri, a professor of mechanical and...

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Here is the perfect spot for a birds' inner compass

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Migratory birds use a magnetic compass in their eye for navigation. Its basic sensory mechanisms have long remained elusive, but now researchers reveal exactly where in the eye, the birds' control center for navigation is situated....
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