sciencehabit writes “A do-it-yourself neuroscience experiment that allows students to create their own ‘cyborg’ insects is sparking controversy amongst scienitsts and ethicists. RoboRoach #12 is a real cockroach that a company called BackyardBrains ships to school students. The students fit the insect with a tiny backpack, which contains electrodes that feed into its antennae and receive signals by remote control — via the Bluetooth signals emitted by smartphones. A simple swipe of an iPhone can turn the insect left or right. Though some scientists say the small cyborg is a good educational tool, others say it’s turning kids into psychopaths.” Fitting the backpack requires poking a hole in the roach’s thorax and clipping its antennae to insert electrodes…. sciencehabit writes “A do-it-yourself neuroscience experiment that allows students to create their own ‘cyborg’ insects is sparking controversy amongst scienitsts and ethicists. RoboRoach #12 is a real cockroach that a company called BackyardBrains ships to school students. The students fit the insect with a tiny backpack, which contains electrodes that feed into its antennae and receive signals by remote control — via the Bluetooth signals emitted by smartphones. A simple swipe of an iPhone can turn the insect left or right. Though some scientists say the small cyborg is a good educational tool, others say it’s turning kids into psychopaths.” Fitting the backpack requires poking a hole in the roach’s thorax and clipping its antennae to insert electrodes.

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