A rat may never be man’s best friend,
but the Rugged Automated Training System research sponsored by scientists with
the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, in collaboration with engineers at West
Point and the Counter Explosives Hazards Center, will determine if and how
these animals can be trained to save soldiers’ lives.
In July, Barron Associates Inc.,
Charlottesville, Va. was selected for an award under the Small Business
Technology Transfer, or STTR, program to develop and test a rugged, automated
and low-cost system for training rats to detect improvised explosive devices
and mines, said Micheline Strand, chief of the Army Research Office‘s Life
Sciences Division, which manages the program.
“The automated system we’re developing
is designed to inexpensively train rats to detect buried explosives to solve an
immediate Army need for safer and lower-cost mine removal,” said William
Gressick, senior research engineer and the project’s principal investigator at
Barron Associates. “Beyond this application, the system will facilitate the use
of rats in other search tasks such as homeland security and search-and-rescue operations.
In the long-term, the system is likely to benefit both official and
humanitarian organizations.”
“If we can demonstrate that rats can be
trained inexpensively to be reliable detectors, then this method would not only
lower costs for the Army but would also create new opportunities for using
animals to detect anything from mines to humans buried in earthquake rubble,”
Strand said.
It is well established that animals are
capable of identifying explosives at lower concentrations than abiotic systems.
The Department of Defense currently relies on dogs as the animal of choice for
explosives detection. The goal of this STTR program is not to replace the use
of dogs, but to expand the Army’s detection capabilities.
“Training dogs is very expensive. If we
can significantly reduce the cost of a trained animal, then we could provide
more animals to protect soldiers.” Strand explained.
Trained rats would also create new
opportunities; rats can search smaller spaces than a dog can, and are easier to
transport.
Landmines kill between 15,000 and 20,000
people a year, and continue to kill adults and children decades after a
conflict ends. An automated system to train rats to find mines could accelerate
worldwide efforts to clear mined areas and return mined land to farming or
other productive uses.
ABOUT U.S. ARMY RESEARCH LABORATORY:
The U.S. Army Research Laboratory of the
U.S. Army Research Development and Engineering Command is the Army’s corporate
laboratory. For more information, visit www.arl.army.mil, there you can link to
the ARL Facebook page or Inside the Lab, the ARL News Channel on You Tube.
By U.S. Army Research Laboratory Public
Affairs
From www.army.mil
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