Social insects inspire human design

The international conference ‘Social Biomimicry: Insect Societies and Human Design’, hosted by Arizona State University, USA, 18–20 February 2010, explored how the collective behaviour and nest architecture of social insects can inspire innovative and effective solutions to human design challenges. It brought together biologists, designers, engineers, computer scientists, architects and businesspeople, with the dual aims of enriching biology and advancing biomimetic design.

[1]  Richard H. C. Bonser,et al.  Patented Biologically-inspired technological innovations: A twenty year view , 2006 .

[2]  J. Vincent,et al.  Biomimetics: its practice and theory , 2006, Journal of The Royal Society Interface.

[3]  J. Scott Turner,et al.  Beyond biomimicry: What termites can tell us about realizing the living building. , 2008 .

[4]  Eamonn B. Mallon,et al.  Information flow, opinion polling and collective intelligence in house-hunting social insects. , 2002, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[5]  Janine M. Benyus,et al.  Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature , 1997 .

[6]  Stephen F. Smith,et al.  Wasp-like Agents for Distributed Factory Coordination , 2004, Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems.

[7]  Laurent Keller,et al.  Ant-like task allocation and recruitment in cooperative robots , 2000, Nature.

[8]  Craig Tovey,et al.  From honeybees to Internet servers: biomimicry for distributed management of Internet hosting centers , 2007, Bioinspiration & biomimetics.

[9]  D. N. Carss,et al.  Meeting report , 1975, Appetite.

[10]  Guy Theraulaz,et al.  Self-Organization in Biological Systems , 2001, Princeton studies in complexity.

[11]  Thomas Hesselberg,et al.  Biomimetics and the case of the remarkable ragworms , 2007, Naturwissenschaften.

[12]  E. Wilson The Insect Societies , 1974 .

[13]  Marco Dorigo,et al.  Swarm intelligence: from natural to artificial systems , 1999 .