Drive Like the Ants
Aussie entomologist has unusual solution for congested roads...
The not so humble ant can teach pushy humans a thing or two when it comes to traffic management.Despite route-marching over every continent in their quest for global domination, they never get stuck in jams.
Experts at the University of Sydney have been studying leaf-cutter ants to see if their behaviour could provide the basis for a system of driverless cars controlled by ant traffic algorithms, according to a recent report in Wired Science.
'We should use their rules,' said Sydney entomologist Audrey Dussutour. 'I’ve been working with ants for eight years and have never seen a traffic jam, and I’ve tried.'
According to Dussutour, the secret of success is simple - patience. Leaf-cutter ants on the move organise themselves into highly regular streams of load-carrying and unloaded individuals, a bit like a multi-lane highway.
Now studies have shown that when the creatures reach a potential bottleneck like a ‘single lane’ tree branch, unladen ants queue patiently behind the slower-moving load carriers instead of trying to overtake.
The university team has calculated this behaviour reduces the delay experienced by an individual ant crossing a crowded three-metre bridge from 64 to 32 seconds.
When applied to future Inter-Vehicle Communications systems, researchers hope ant behaviour can one day help improve the human rat race.
Either that or i'm not understanding what he's advocating for.
Oh, and buses are a different issue cause they still simply carry more people per unit road space, so we should still give way to them.
So, if we're going to mimic the ants' system, we have to get rid of all junctions and roundabouts, ban stopping anywhere on the road system, and ensure that everyone has unique routes that radiate out from where they live to wherever they might want to go. Somehow, I don't think such a system is practical.
Will
The more volume of water the bigger the river. Do the same with the roads, side roads feeding into bigger main roads and easing congestion. Simple. Just like the "powers that be" but more helpful.
Or let us drivers decide what is best for us and stop with pathetic studies from school kids with no driving experience.
So, if we're going to mimic the ants' system, we have to get rid of all junctions and roundabouts, ban stopping anywhere on the road system, and ensure that everyone has unique routes that radiate out from where they live to wherever they might want to go. Somehow, I don't think such a system is practical.
Will
and
Now studies have shown that when the creatures reach a potential bottleneck like a ‘single lane’ tree branch, unladen ants queue patiently behind the slower-moving load carriers instead of trying to overtake.
fund licence too. 
and
Now studies have shown that when the creatures reach a potential bottleneck like a ‘single lane’ tree branch, unladen ants queue patiently behind the slower-moving load carriers instead of trying to overtake.
My first thought too.Could easily re-write the article as:
Er, hang on a sec mate...
Ant's use chemical signals to govern their movement patterns in the sense of the collective consciousness (well according to EO Wilson)- something that a car driven by a human would never be able to process as we lost the conscious ability to translate chemical signals long long ago. However, translate that in terms of electrical signals sent from one car to the other to inform the collective intelligence of the automated driver thingy and it might well work.
The bottom line is that a computer would know its place in the grand scheme of things just like ants, however whereas humans are individuals in a pack- ants are members of the collective (think Borg from Star Trek) - humans lack the ability to empathise with the collective and the ability to put the collective achievement over the individual achievement (e.g. queue jumping, road rage, competition etc); so any attempt at hybrid control would be a total failure.
Clear as mud?
Ant's use chemical signals to govern their movement patterns in the sense of the collective consciousness (well according to EO Wilson)- something that a car driven by a human would never be able to process as we lost the conscious ability to translate chemical signals long long ago. However, translate that in terms of electrical signals sent from one car to the other to inform the collective intelligence of the automated driver thingy and it might well work.
The bottom line is that a computer would know its place in the grand scheme of things just like ants, however whereas humans are individuals in a pack- ants are members of the collective (think Borg from Star Trek) - humans lack the ability to empathise with the collective and the ability to put the collective achievement over the individual achievement (e.g. queue jumping, road rage, competition etc); so any attempt at hybrid control would be a total failure.
Clear as mud?
One day they will take over the world and enslave us, they will be our masters.
Mark my words.
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? Have I missed something, has the dutch government taken over Belgium after the Fortis/ABN Amro merger?