Killing an animal quickly and efficiently is generally held to be more "humane" than torturing it endlessly (and keeping it alive). It's the reason people put sickly pets down, rather than letting them suffer for months.
I don't agree with your premise here. I'm sure cockroaches have no concept of existential suffering, of the 'how unfortunate I am' variety. That doesn't mean they don't experience pain while it's being administered, and this backpack thing doesn't exactly look comfortable.
According to the website [1], it is fairly debatable that they "feel pain" and if they do, they are anaesthetised.
> Criticism: This enables and encourages kids to harm animals
> The cockroach is anesthetized during the surgery to avoid the risk of the cockroach experiencing pain (though it is debatable whether they experience pain at all), and the cockroach adapts to the stimulation rapidly. The 55 Hz stimulation we use is the same frequency used in electrical stimulation to treat human diseases such as Parkinson's.
The company PR is quite obviously, as claimed, "disingenuous":
> The spokeswoman insisted that the insects are treated humanely and that the backpack - first developed in 2011 - does not harm them.
Boring a hole in the head, and then another hole in the chest, and then clipping the antennae, so you can attach an apparatus which appears to roughly half the size of the roach itself and which exerts major control over its motion, does not approach "humane". Anyone found doing this to humans could very reasonably be lynched.
I'd prefer to see the company own it. To repurpose an argument I first saw on that bastion of philosophical thought cracked.com, "Cockroaches? Fuck 'em." Focus on the scientific potential of remote-controlled cockroaches.
Cockroaches have no rights that man is bound to respect. [1] There are no conceivable benefits to extending them any rights. And I'm not particularly worried that a child who grows up thinking of insects as something to be used or abused as they see fit will mistreat humans. I burned ants with a magnifying glass. It didn't seem to bother anyone. I went on to burn my sister's name into a block of wood as a gift. That's pretty much where things ended.
If a child of mine showed any interest in this sort of thing, I'd be happy to sponsor it.
The article actually made me wonder whether the cockroach lives through installation; I have read that cockroaches "live on" for a period of weeks after being beheaded. It would be really, really cool to get something like this that
- didn't prevent other cockroaches from accepting the bugged one
- didn't block the roach from fitting through gaps it would normally be able to fit through.
- included a highly miniaturized video camera
> It's the reason people put sickly pets down, rather than letting them suffer for months.
People are generally (there might be exceptions) more attached to their own pets than they are to other people's cockroaches.
> Boring a hole in the head, and then another hole in the chest
According to the article and the instructions[1] there is only one hole and it is in the thorax (through the exoskeleton), which is the middle section and not the head at all (remember from primary school biology, insects have a head, thorax and abdomen).
Not making a case for or against this method or product, just saying.
It is on the head, but it isn't a hole. I imagined it to be more like filing the smooth surface of one of your nails at there are no nerve endings located in the exoskeleton (which is why insects shed their chitin exoskeletons until maturity).
Chitin is the arthropods version of keratin (the stuff your hair and nails are made of).
If someone filed down my nails to the point where they were gone, I'd be more than a little distressed. The skin under the nails is incredibly sensitive (I believe it becomes less so over time when exposed to the air, but we are talking about filing off a protective coating here). If they wouldn't grow back (no idea whether that applies to the cockroaches or not), I'd feel much worse.
I said filing the smooth surface of the nails, not filing all the way through the nail. It is the same as what woman do when they stick fake nails over their real nails... they simply rough up the surface for adhesive purposes, not file the entire nail away.
There are other, more logical, reasons to be outraged if that is your position on this.
> If they wouldn't grow back (no idea whether that applies to the cockroaches or not), I'd feel much worse.
The waxy surface will not grow back, well not if they do the more ethical approach as they would only perform this on mature cockroaches who will not shed any longer.
Again, not supporting or attacking their approach. I think the purpose seems to be the ethical grey area for me. For instance, the black rhino is considered extinct (last I checked) and how we save the white rhinos is by removing their keratin horns to stop poachers. Am I happy we have to do that? Certainly not, however, I'd rather have that then no white rhinos.
Morality is less about the victim and more about the actions of the oppressor. You can say 'screw cockroaches' all you want but how does that justify the savage action of torture?
and starting with insects makes it easier for transition to torturing of sentient beings. It isn't about what a cockroach feels (lets hope not much), it is about what doing it to cockroach does to the mentality of the one who does it.
What happens in the labs must stop. And one of the sure way to do it is to not let children to grow into torturers.
I am torn about medical experiments on animals but I think the distinction needs to be made between what happens in a lab (with ethical frameworks) and what happens in civilian life for entertainment.
that distinction exists only for us, ie. ones who do it. It doesn't exist for subjects of our actions. Refusal to understand it that is so widespread trough the society is a major roadblock in development of emphatic ability which is the key to triggering the next qualitative stage of the human species brain development.
I don't want to start a comment war, but your reasoning is a big part of why I'm against abortion. I would truely be interested to know how the views on the cockroach/torture folks overlap (or not) with their thoughts on abortion.
we start as a lump of quickly dividing cell, a tumor of a kind. We progress though fish-stage, reptile, etc... Different people have different decency standards wrt. killing and torture of living organisms. As we know the society-wide the standard is pretty low - everything, except humans in majority of situation, can be killed and everything, except (thanks God for animal rights people) majority of mammals in majority of situations, tortured. My personal standard as of now is that killing of insects/fish ok, reptiles and birds - don't like it, yet still somewhat ok, and no killing for mammals, and no torture for anybody (at least what i can perceive as a torture). Thus i personally think the abortion is ok up to about week 6-7.
Admittedly death by pyrethroids (most insecticides) is basically death by paralysis, and can't be too pleasant either. I usually resort to the bottom of a shoe as it's the fastest way.
That's like saying that the billion or so nominal Christians are anti-war, because the canonical Christian writings are clearly anti-war, and particularly 'pure' devotees may preach it, and a few may take a principled stand against it ... but in practice, Christians go to war in large numbers. (Exactly like Buddhists, I might add).
In general, the little Laotian mother trying to keep her house clean is not too concerned about the rights of cockroaches.
Like most religious adherents, most Buddhists essentially pay a class of professional adherents to be devout, so they don't have to be. :)
I live in Laos and can confirm the official doctrine is to not hurt any animals. Many people however use the heaviest antibug spray available. Very very few vegetarians around as well.
You might want to be careful attributing beliefs that are part of Buddhist doctrine to people who avow that they are Buddhists. The overlap (for any religion, not just Buddhism) isn't all that large.
Yeah, I'm sorry, this is pretty horrific. The technology behind it is amazing, and the company should be applauded for trying to get children interested in neuroscience, but to hijack a living creature like that? Being squashed by the boot of a shoe seems merciful in comparison to being turned into a Pokémon.
Of course, the above is a response based on emotion, maybe aesthetic grounds. I'm sure a bioethicist can create a better argument against this.
This type of cockroach control is pretty par for the course in undergrad anatomy lab sections... I think the only part that seems weird is the gamification of making it a remote control app.
I suspect that rather depends on where you got those organs.
(As an aside.. what purpose do you think your comment served? Do you really consider that I - the author - or anyone reading it didn't realize you have to kill someone to commit murder? It was an analogy, and I deliberately made it succinct. The point of the comment you replied to was "context is everything". To be fair, you have made that point rather well, although I suspect that wasn't deliberately.)
If it's possible to effectively control cockroaches, then the real application would be military and espionage. Just think of the places cockroaches can go, especially if it's possible to further reduce the size of the apparatus and/or camouflage it.
You can find the information on the product website[1] and the instructions[2]. Effectively it just replaces the antennae with electrodes that provide stimulation at 55Hz. So it can just make the cockroach go left or right (assuming it is moving).
There doesn't seem to be any other control, so you (presumably) cannot make the cockroach go forward, backward, up, down, faster or slower. I imaging to get that sort of control they would need to hijack more sense organs or the brain itself.
I guess the human analogy would be like overriding the inner-ear mechanisms (Vestibular system) to control balance (left and right).
I feel that using cockroaches like this might be justifiable for the purpose of research, but doing this for what amounts to entertainment is quite dark.
Fast forward a ten years. Is it inconceivable a similar technology will work on humans? I've read we already have the reverse - quadriplegic people can control a mouse on a screen by thinking.
If this would work on a human, how would a human attached to one of these perceive the foreign control? I'd imagine these electrodes would reproduce the brain signals that cause our muscles to move, but not alter our consciousness. So we would be aware that our own bodies were moving and responding to someone else's control. Imagine for example, wanting to stop walking but your body keeps on putting one foot in front of the other. Scary to lose control.
I'm not sure how far fetched that is, but it may be an interesting way to think about the morality of this device on roaches. I'm not sure if we know if roaches have a degree of consciousness, or if they operate 100% on instinct. Either way it's hard not to project or imagine some level of consciousness on the roach.
> If this would work on a human, how would a human attached to one of these perceive the foreign control? I'd imagine these electrodes would reproduce the brain signals that cause our muscles to move, but not alter our consciousness. So we would be aware that our own bodies were moving and responding to someone else's control. Imagine for example, wanting to stop walking but your body keeps on putting one foot in front of the other. Scary to lose control.
There is existing research relevant to this question. It concerns people whose corpus callosum (the cable connecting the brain's right and left hemispheres) has been cut.
It's possible to present such a person with something (here, a sign with words written on it) that is only visible to one of their eyes, and thus one hemisphere of their brain. It is also possible for such a person to be not consciously aware of what one of their eyes is seeing.
If you present, in the field of view which doesn't have conscious awareness, a sign saying e.g. "please stand up", they will. If you then ask them why they did it, they won't know, but they won't say that; they'll make something up like "I was going to get a Coke".
There is no evidence that they're being deceptive. So it's quite possible that you'd perceive your controlled actions as voluntary. (I'm not taking a position as to whether that's more or less horrifying than perceiving the control.)
there was a U of W study posted here a month or two back showing the first human brain to brain interface. Very cool, very creep.
There's a video of one guy playing an FPS without a fire button on his mouse, every time he goes to shoot someone, his connected partner in another wing of the campus presses the fire button on a keyboard. The man with the fire button can't see anything except for a keyboard.
People used to worry kids ripping wings off of houseflies weren't right in the head. Budding aerospace engineers cheated of their true potential because no U.S. company had the ingenuity to market $100 wing scissors?
Genetics and environment each play a part, I suppose, but cruelty can be a learned behavior. The price point means this is more likely to be used by people who will take it seriously, but it just struck me as a particularly ghoulish piece of kit to put next to the microscope and chemistry set. I read "A Father's Story" not too long ago, so maybe that doesn't help the cause.
On the other hand, most of us had at least a couple dissections under our belt by high school, and it wasn't like those critters willingly offered themselves up towards our erudition, either. A practical education in science did seem to involve doing things we could have just read about in books, even if it caused a few nitric acid stains here and there and dozens of fetal pigs to lay down their lives, so maybe I'm being too quick to judge.
Now, are marketeers in general psychopaths? I don't think it's a hard and fast rule...
How do I know that the company spews bullshit? Because it mentions Alzheimer. This is the modern trigger word for asking for funding without stating a concrete goal.
I was a researcher on an analogous research project involving dragonflies [1]. Let me explain the difference: all of our research had strict ethical guidelines backed by IRB approvals, the procedures were performed by trained biologists, and the outcome is fundamental neurology research that will be published in Science or Nature. Meanwhile, these cockroach experiments are being performed w/o oversight, by "citizen scientists", with no apparent outcome other than novelty and staving off boredom. BIG difference. I do not approve.
* Thankfully, my work on the dragonfly project was the biotelemetry radio link rather than working with live animals.
You know, there's a school of thought that says IRB approvals prevent a lot of valuable research from happening. This isn't the ground I would have chosen to stand on to defend them.
But beyond that fairly narrow issue, what you're espousing here is an incredibly benighted view. We want "citizen scientists" to be moved by the spirit of inquiry and run the experiments that take their fancy. That's how progress is made. "Novelty and staving off boredom" are a primary motivation for many professional scientists; I still remember the essay I read pointing out that the true scientific mindset was that of an overeager dog who just has to see what's behind that door... and the next one! and the next!
Science-related toys for children have long been felt to promote positive goals, like sparking the interest of a future scientist or just raising awareness of what scientists might do. I see complaints all the time that you can't buy a decent chemistry set anymore. And here you're admitting that exactly this sort of experiment can be published in Nature, but children should keep their hands off? You don't see me crusading to keep Lego Mindstorms in professional hands only. I like it when children share my interests.
Major progress has been made by serendipity and by "citizen scientists" acting without oversight. And, for that matter, by professional scientists acting without oversight. Making the tools more accessible can only get things to happen faster.
This is not citizen science. It's just a toy. There's no science taught here. It's just idle noodling. There's nothing about scientific method or repeatability or changing parameters or anything.
You mention the fear that has caused chemistry sets to be reduced, but that's only part of the problem. The other problem is really bad toys being sold as "science" with nothing sciency about them.
> It's just a toy. There's no science taught here. It's just idle noodling.
This doesn't remind you of, say, a C64? The kit is a tool. You can do different things with it. If, at any point, someone using the kit thinks to themselves "what would happen if I did X?" and then does X to see what happens, that is citizen science.
> The other problem is really bad toys being sold as "science" with nothing sciency about them.
This is a problem, although in my experience it's not a large one. It definitely doesn't apply here, though; witness yourself the people saying they've worked on similar projects.
I've already mentioned several questions about the product that implicate "science" generally:
- can you mount a camera on the roach? If you can, and it acts naturally afterwards (or even naturally with the caveat that it's stopped fitting into cockroach-sized cracks), you'll pick up extremely valuable footage that a biologist studying cockroaches would love to have.
- Will other cockroaches accept one that's had this kit installed? If not, why not?
- Can I use my RC cockroach to influence the behavior of a swarm? Choose for them where they'll sleep? Dictate what left-out food they choose to eat and what they pass by? Cockroaches are social. Using one to manipulate a colony would be huge.
No, it doesn't. The C64 and other early home computers came with extensive instruction manuals detailing the memory map and all the language instruction. People would enter a program. They'd debug it. They'd modify it. They'd create their own programs.
Compare that to the toy - find bug, attach device, SCIENCE.
It's really shitty marketing.
> I've already mentioned several questions about the product that implicate "science" generally:
If they had any of those in any of the marketing or the instructions they might just be able to scrape by calling this a science toy. They don't. By your definition any toy becomes a science toy. Look! Drop it off a building! That's gravity!
> By your definition any toy becomes a science toy. Look! Drop it off a building! That's gravity!
Well, first I'll note that my high school physics class involved labs demonstrating various well-known properties of gravity. I found them a waste of time, but that seems to be a minority opinion.
But let me repeat myself:
"If, at any point, someone using the kit thinks to themselves "what would happen if I did X?" and then does X to see what happens, that is citizen science."
I'm happy to stand by that statement as to any toy. But it's especially likely with a toy like this.
I possess the very same scientific mindset and curiosity that you describe, which is why I dedicated my life to science. But I wouldn't let my children insert probes into my cat's brain. Comparing Lego Mindstorms (which I love and endorse) to mutilating a living animal is misguided at best.
Telling me to be "ashamed of myself" is completely ignorant of all the scientific outreach I've done. Don't project.
As for IRB... it's a pain in the ass. But for good reason: standard ethics training. Just go look at some of the shit that has been done in the name of "research" (eg. Stanford prison experiment, Tuskegee experiment, etc). In this case, IRB approval simply says, "we've thought about the processes and the ethics behind these experiments, and we got the review board to agree to our protocols."
EDIT: Would you be OK if the animal was a mouse? cat? dog? person? Where do you draw the line between "scientific exploration" and "cruelty"? That's why universities use IRB -- because even well-intentioned individuals can be blinded.
> Comparing Lego Mindstorms (which I love and endorse) to mutilating a living animal is misguided at best.
> Telling me to be "ashamed of myself" is completely ignorant of all the scientific outreach I've done. Don't project.
I quote those two together because I wrote the things you object to for the same reason.
Your original comment is very heavily flavored with "this is OK... for professionals". I object to that. As biology is your field, so programming is mine; I draw a parallel between my worry that programming is for professionals only and yours that biology is.
I wouldn't let my (they're hypothetical) children probe my (also hypothetical) cat's brain either. But that's because I know my cat. If I thought they stood any chance of accomplishing something (a worry this kit easily satisfies), I'd be happy to get them a cat from an animal shelter or some such.
You state, "Thankfully, my work on the dragonfly project was the biotelemetry radio link rather than working with live animals" (my emphasis). That suggests you're not comfortable with this sort of thing. That's fine, most things aren't for everyone.
But just because it's not for you, doesn't mean it should be for no one. The potential in this general area is obvious; there is no call for you to go around telling people to stay away unless they have ten years of "preparation".
As to your examples of unethical science...
- both of those involve humans
- much, much worse experiments have been done
- the prison experiment in particular has a bunch of methodological issues, but is widely discussed today in support of various ideas. I'd kind of like to see replications; I'm really not comfortable with simultaneously saying "we need to draw these important lessons" and "we must never test the lessons we've drawn, as it's ethically impossible to do so".
EDIT:
Replied without seeing your edit. There is no line between "scientific exploration" and "cruelty"; they are orthogonal concepts. The Nazis gave us invaluable knowledge of how long a human can expect to stay afloat in water at various temperatures by drowning Jews in water of various temperatures. Obviously, that won't (and shouldn't) be getting by any ethics boards. But people in Europe have protested the posting at beaches of signs with the information, because it comes to us from an evil source. That disgusts me. It's still true, and pretty relevant to the beaches where it's posted.
I would be OK with doing this to a person assuming they consented freely. (And I note that very similar things have been done to human subjects.) I'm not worried by whether paying people is in fact coercing them; it's not.
I am not bothered by doing this to a nonhuman regardless of whether they consent. Obviously, they don't consent. I don't care.
My statements were not "it's for professionals only." It was: I believe the kit creators have done a piss-poor job of talking about the deeper questions, or even acknowledging them. I'd want my scientifically-minded children to really think about these when performing experiments. (I actually thought the kit sounded mad-cool when I first learned of it. I think you could make a good case for it being analogous to an ant farm -- but that's not what you're saying.)
Minor nit... I'm a roboticist and RF engineer (EECS). Currently I'm (basically) a web programmer. I'm not a biologist.
EDIT: Per your edits... you are wrong. "Facts" and "cruelty" may be orthogonal, but "responsible scientific exploration" and "cruelty" are not.
Look back at the question you asked me. Look for the word "responsible".
Sorry to have misunderstood your profession; I'm not going to edit previous post(s) because my false belief significantly informed my arguments and rhetoric. Obviously, not being a biologist, this doesn't make you protectionist, but I still deeply disagree with what you've said, and though some of what I said doesn't apply to you particularly, I feel it has some general validity.
Oh get over yourself. He's not telling people to avoid doing any kind of science at all, he's saying there are severe ethical problems with aimlessly experimenting on living things.
> Let me explain the difference: all of our research had strict ethical guidelines backed by IRB approvals, the procedures were performed by trained biologists...
Maybe your university was different, but at the University of California, no IRB approval is necessary for invertebrates. This is part of what makes fruit flies such attractive model organisms (nb I am a fruit fly biologist).
This must be way off topic but did Hitler believe he was doing the right thing?
Edit:
I once read about the creators of Roboroach defend the idea. I still didn't agree (It's OK for things I disagree with to exist in the world). Their kickstarter is successful so I guess enough people approve the idea.
Also I liked how the kicstarter page made Roboroach creator's words look like they are Mashable's.
On Roboroach Kickstarter
Mashable - "... the RoboRoach is not a toy, but rather a learning tool."
On Masahble
Gage and Marzullo underline the fact that the RoboRoach is not a toy, but rather a learning tool.
The creators are probably truly passionate about their field of work, want it to be just an educational tool and maybe they are right. But I just can't tell this apart from a PR plaster.
This sales campaign has been fairly effective for me; I'll happily pay $99 for this. I boil alive and then eat a close relative of these animals, and other people eat living animals (I just don't like those particular animals). At-home science is at least as defensible.
Torture is wrong. Especially prolonged torture in the form of forced servitude. How can you claim any degree of moral backing for this practice when its science lacks merits and it is merely a toy of torture?
It's more that it teaches individuals existing science, creating more interest in science and thus potentially future scientists who will push the bounds of human knowledge, vs. this itself advancing the limits of human knowledge.
I agree with you about torture, but mitigate that with the lower life form status of cockroaches. I wouldn't support the same thing done to rats, octopus, etc., all things being equal (although I'm ok with less intrusive or more beneficial things done to higher life forms; in the limit, final medical testing on monkeys and humans).
It's expensive and the science value is low. For $100 you could make most of the stuff on http://scitoys.com/
While I tend to the more animal rightsy end of the spectrum I tend to agree that putting this on a cockroach isn't too troubling from the point of view of the bug. But does it lead to beetles in vending machines[1] or live turtles in tiny pouches[2]?
I don't think we're creating a generation of kids who'll go on to re-create ZippoCat, but it's worth some thought.
I agree the keychains are probably fairly far over the line.
The cockroach backpack is not something I'd consider appropriate for young children, but for teenagers/etc., it seems like a pretty reasonable thing. If it exposed an API and did two way communication/logging it would be a lot more interesting.
Maybe in both cases (keychain and current-backpack), it's primarily the uselessness of it which is most objectionable.
If I lived in USA, I would take control of these ppl who work for this sick company and force them to do stuff. Where did the roach agree to this? Your so sick. Plz sum 1 from America find this company and kick the shit out of all of them...scum
Time to risk a hell-ban:
I'm genuinely curious how people's views on this being torture and leading to children without empathy, ect coincide with people being against abortion for similar reasons. Does anyone support abortion rights but is against this toy? Or vice versa?
I support the right of a woman to have an abortion, and I'm also very uncomfortable with this product. In general, I think it's OK to cause pain or kill non-sentient beings as long as it leads to a useful end. Killing a cow so we can eat the meat is fine, but you're not allowed to torture it as you kill it [1].
An abortion is also OK on the same grounds: a fetus before 3 months of gestation is definitely not sentient, and killing it could prevent a great deal of hardship. To be clear, I think abortion is horrible, but it could be the least bad option available.
For this cockroach control toy, it's not clear that it causes the cockroach any pain, but it sure looks like torture. The potentially utility of it looks rather low as well. I can see that it could be useful for learning (and maybe some science as well) but I suspect at lot of people will buy it just for entertainment. That is what makes me very uncomfortable about this device.
NOTE: As the spokesman has made a public claim the insects are NOT harmed by the product, you are at liberty to take up complaints via trading standards bodies / regulators and sue. I would encourage everyone to do so.
We had a company like that over here - huntingdon life sciences (UK) which as awareness of their activities spread, had regular potests at their offices, preventing workers from working. Once scientists addresses started making public appearance, things very quickly escalated.
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[ 1.8 ms ] story [ 162 ms ] threadThis is an animal we purposefully kill by the thousands upon thousands just because they're annoying.
That is only the case if it has the concept of suffering. Does it?
> Criticism: This enables and encourages kids to harm animals
> The cockroach is anesthetized during the surgery to avoid the risk of the cockroach experiencing pain (though it is debatable whether they experience pain at all), and the cockroach adapts to the stimulation rapidly. The 55 Hz stimulation we use is the same frequency used in electrical stimulation to treat human diseases such as Parkinson's.
[1] https://backyardbrains.com/products/roboroach
> The spokeswoman insisted that the insects are treated humanely and that the backpack - first developed in 2011 - does not harm them.
Boring a hole in the head, and then another hole in the chest, and then clipping the antennae, so you can attach an apparatus which appears to roughly half the size of the roach itself and which exerts major control over its motion, does not approach "humane". Anyone found doing this to humans could very reasonably be lynched.
I'd prefer to see the company own it. To repurpose an argument I first saw on that bastion of philosophical thought cracked.com, "Cockroaches? Fuck 'em." Focus on the scientific potential of remote-controlled cockroaches.
Cockroaches have no rights that man is bound to respect. [1] There are no conceivable benefits to extending them any rights. And I'm not particularly worried that a child who grows up thinking of insects as something to be used or abused as they see fit will mistreat humans. I burned ants with a magnifying glass. It didn't seem to bother anyone. I went on to burn my sister's name into a block of wood as a gift. That's pretty much where things ended.
If a child of mine showed any interest in this sort of thing, I'd be happy to sponsor it.
The article actually made me wonder whether the cockroach lives through installation; I have read that cockroaches "live on" for a period of weeks after being beheaded. It would be really, really cool to get something like this that
- didn't prevent other cockroaches from accepting the bugged one
- didn't block the roach from fitting through gaps it would normally be able to fit through.
- included a highly miniaturized video camera
> It's the reason people put sickly pets down, rather than letting them suffer for months.
People are generally (there might be exceptions) more attached to their own pets than they are to other people's cockroaches.
[1] http://www.acslaw.org/acsblog/no-rights-which-the-white-man-...
According to the article and the instructions[1] there is only one hole and it is in the thorax (through the exoskeleton), which is the middle section and not the head at all (remember from primary school biology, insects have a head, thorax and abdomen).
Not making a case for or against this method or product, just saying.
[1] http://wiki.backyardbrains.com/RoboRoach_Surgery
> sandpaper is used to remove the waxy coating on the shell of the insect's head.
I interpreted the waxy coating as being something that was part of the head. Could be wrong.
Chitin is the arthropods version of keratin (the stuff your hair and nails are made of).
There are other, more logical, reasons to be outraged if that is your position on this.
> If they wouldn't grow back (no idea whether that applies to the cockroaches or not), I'd feel much worse.
The waxy surface will not grow back, well not if they do the more ethical approach as they would only perform this on mature cockroaches who will not shed any longer.
Again, not supporting or attacking their approach. I think the purpose seems to be the ethical grey area for me. For instance, the black rhino is considered extinct (last I checked) and how we save the white rhinos is by removing their keratin horns to stop poachers. Am I happy we have to do that? Certainly not, however, I'd rather have that then no white rhinos.
What happens in the labs must stop. And one of the sure way to do it is to not let children to grow into torturers.
About 6% of the world population is Buddhist. That's about 350m people who believe cockroaches have rights.
EDIT: mr_luc and thaumasiotes point out my obvious error!
That's like saying that the billion or so nominal Christians are anti-war, because the canonical Christian writings are clearly anti-war, and particularly 'pure' devotees may preach it, and a few may take a principled stand against it ... but in practice, Christians go to war in large numbers. (Exactly like Buddhists, I might add).
In general, the little Laotian mother trying to keep her house clean is not too concerned about the rights of cockroaches.
Like most religious adherents, most Buddhists essentially pay a class of professional adherents to be devout, so they don't have to be. :)
Of course, the above is a response based on emotion, maybe aesthetic grounds. I'm sure a bioethicist can create a better argument against this.
Do that in your kitchen and you get labelled a murderer.
Context is everything.
No, you don't. You get labeled a freak, and you may or may not be charged under health-related laws.
To be labelled a murderer, you have to kill someone.
(As an aside.. what purpose do you think your comment served? Do you really consider that I - the author - or anyone reading it didn't realize you have to kill someone to commit murder? It was an analogy, and I deliberately made it succinct. The point of the comment you replied to was "context is everything". To be fair, you have made that point rather well, although I suspect that wasn't deliberately.)
If it's possible to effectively control cockroaches, then the real application would be military and espionage. Just think of the places cockroaches can go, especially if it's possible to further reduce the size of the apparatus and/or camouflage it.
Yeah, found the link: Roborats: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/05/0501_020501_...
The horror!
This was actually featured on HN back when this project was on kickstarter.
There doesn't seem to be any other control, so you (presumably) cannot make the cockroach go forward, backward, up, down, faster or slower. I imaging to get that sort of control they would need to hijack more sense organs or the brain itself.
I guess the human analogy would be like overriding the inner-ear mechanisms (Vestibular system) to control balance (left and right).
[1] https://backyardbrains.com/products/roboroach
[2] http://wiki.backyardbrains.com/RoboRoach_Surgery
If this would work on a human, how would a human attached to one of these perceive the foreign control? I'd imagine these electrodes would reproduce the brain signals that cause our muscles to move, but not alter our consciousness. So we would be aware that our own bodies were moving and responding to someone else's control. Imagine for example, wanting to stop walking but your body keeps on putting one foot in front of the other. Scary to lose control.
I'm not sure how far fetched that is, but it may be an interesting way to think about the morality of this device on roaches. I'm not sure if we know if roaches have a degree of consciousness, or if they operate 100% on instinct. Either way it's hard not to project or imagine some level of consciousness on the roach.
Once you do that, this device seems diabolical.
"I have to turn left because it's my job."
There is existing research relevant to this question. It concerns people whose corpus callosum (the cable connecting the brain's right and left hemispheres) has been cut.
It's possible to present such a person with something (here, a sign with words written on it) that is only visible to one of their eyes, and thus one hemisphere of their brain. It is also possible for such a person to be not consciously aware of what one of their eyes is seeing.
If you present, in the field of view which doesn't have conscious awareness, a sign saying e.g. "please stand up", they will. If you then ask them why they did it, they won't know, but they won't say that; they'll make something up like "I was going to get a Coke".
There is no evidence that they're being deceptive. So it's quite possible that you'd perceive your controlled actions as voluntary. (I'm not taking a position as to whether that's more or less horrifying than perceiving the control.)
There's a video of one guy playing an FPS without a fire button on his mouse, every time he goes to shoot someone, his connected partner in another wing of the campus presses the fire button on a keyboard. The man with the fire button can't see anything except for a keyboard.
This should end well. We definitely don't have enough mass-killings in society today.
I've observed both ways, where the kids were far more sane than the parents, and then there are kids that turn out evil despite the best parents.
On the other hand, most of us had at least a couple dissections under our belt by high school, and it wasn't like those critters willingly offered themselves up towards our erudition, either. A practical education in science did seem to involve doing things we could have just read about in books, even if it caused a few nitric acid stains here and there and dozens of fetal pigs to lay down their lives, so maybe I'm being too quick to judge.
Now, are marketeers in general psychopaths? I don't think it's a hard and fast rule...
Have to say, I think I agree.
If the intent is education, then I condone this, if it is entertainment then I do not.
* Thankfully, my work on the dragonfly project was the biotelemetry radio link rather than working with live animals.
[1] http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/06/dragonfly-backpack... => No control of the dragonflies; only neural telemetry.
But beyond that fairly narrow issue, what you're espousing here is an incredibly benighted view. We want "citizen scientists" to be moved by the spirit of inquiry and run the experiments that take their fancy. That's how progress is made. "Novelty and staving off boredom" are a primary motivation for many professional scientists; I still remember the essay I read pointing out that the true scientific mindset was that of an overeager dog who just has to see what's behind that door... and the next one! and the next!
Science-related toys for children have long been felt to promote positive goals, like sparking the interest of a future scientist or just raising awareness of what scientists might do. I see complaints all the time that you can't buy a decent chemistry set anymore. And here you're admitting that exactly this sort of experiment can be published in Nature, but children should keep their hands off? You don't see me crusading to keep Lego Mindstorms in professional hands only. I like it when children share my interests.
Major progress has been made by serendipity and by "citizen scientists" acting without oversight. And, for that matter, by professional scientists acting without oversight. Making the tools more accessible can only get things to happen faster.
You should be ashamed of yourself.
You mention the fear that has caused chemistry sets to be reduced, but that's only part of the problem. The other problem is really bad toys being sold as "science" with nothing sciency about them.
> It's just a toy. There's no science taught here. It's just idle noodling.
This doesn't remind you of, say, a C64? The kit is a tool. You can do different things with it. If, at any point, someone using the kit thinks to themselves "what would happen if I did X?" and then does X to see what happens, that is citizen science.
> The other problem is really bad toys being sold as "science" with nothing sciency about them.
This is a problem, although in my experience it's not a large one. It definitely doesn't apply here, though; witness yourself the people saying they've worked on similar projects.
I've already mentioned several questions about the product that implicate "science" generally:
- can you mount a camera on the roach? If you can, and it acts naturally afterwards (or even naturally with the caveat that it's stopped fitting into cockroach-sized cracks), you'll pick up extremely valuable footage that a biologist studying cockroaches would love to have.
- Will other cockroaches accept one that's had this kit installed? If not, why not?
- Can I use my RC cockroach to influence the behavior of a swarm? Choose for them where they'll sleep? Dictate what left-out food they choose to eat and what they pass by? Cockroaches are social. Using one to manipulate a colony would be huge.
No, it doesn't. The C64 and other early home computers came with extensive instruction manuals detailing the memory map and all the language instruction. People would enter a program. They'd debug it. They'd modify it. They'd create their own programs.
Compare that to the toy - find bug, attach device, SCIENCE.
It's really shitty marketing.
> I've already mentioned several questions about the product that implicate "science" generally:
If they had any of those in any of the marketing or the instructions they might just be able to scrape by calling this a science toy. They don't. By your definition any toy becomes a science toy. Look! Drop it off a building! That's gravity!
Well, first I'll note that my high school physics class involved labs demonstrating various well-known properties of gravity. I found them a waste of time, but that seems to be a minority opinion.
But let me repeat myself:
"If, at any point, someone using the kit thinks to themselves "what would happen if I did X?" and then does X to see what happens, that is citizen science."
I'm happy to stand by that statement as to any toy. But it's especially likely with a toy like this.
Telling me to be "ashamed of myself" is completely ignorant of all the scientific outreach I've done. Don't project.
As for IRB... it's a pain in the ass. But for good reason: standard ethics training. Just go look at some of the shit that has been done in the name of "research" (eg. Stanford prison experiment, Tuskegee experiment, etc). In this case, IRB approval simply says, "we've thought about the processes and the ethics behind these experiments, and we got the review board to agree to our protocols."
EDIT: Would you be OK if the animal was a mouse? cat? dog? person? Where do you draw the line between "scientific exploration" and "cruelty"? That's why universities use IRB -- because even well-intentioned individuals can be blinded.
> Telling me to be "ashamed of myself" is completely ignorant of all the scientific outreach I've done. Don't project.
I quote those two together because I wrote the things you object to for the same reason.
Your original comment is very heavily flavored with "this is OK... for professionals". I object to that. As biology is your field, so programming is mine; I draw a parallel between my worry that programming is for professionals only and yours that biology is.
I wouldn't let my (they're hypothetical) children probe my (also hypothetical) cat's brain either. But that's because I know my cat. If I thought they stood any chance of accomplishing something (a worry this kit easily satisfies), I'd be happy to get them a cat from an animal shelter or some such.
You state, "Thankfully, my work on the dragonfly project was the biotelemetry radio link rather than working with live animals" (my emphasis). That suggests you're not comfortable with this sort of thing. That's fine, most things aren't for everyone.
But just because it's not for you, doesn't mean it should be for no one. The potential in this general area is obvious; there is no call for you to go around telling people to stay away unless they have ten years of "preparation".
As to your examples of unethical science...
- both of those involve humans
- much, much worse experiments have been done
- the prison experiment in particular has a bunch of methodological issues, but is widely discussed today in support of various ideas. I'd kind of like to see replications; I'm really not comfortable with simultaneously saying "we need to draw these important lessons" and "we must never test the lessons we've drawn, as it's ethically impossible to do so".
EDIT:
Replied without seeing your edit. There is no line between "scientific exploration" and "cruelty"; they are orthogonal concepts. The Nazis gave us invaluable knowledge of how long a human can expect to stay afloat in water at various temperatures by drowning Jews in water of various temperatures. Obviously, that won't (and shouldn't) be getting by any ethics boards. But people in Europe have protested the posting at beaches of signs with the information, because it comes to us from an evil source. That disgusts me. It's still true, and pretty relevant to the beaches where it's posted.
I would be OK with doing this to a person assuming they consented freely. (And I note that very similar things have been done to human subjects.) I'm not worried by whether paying people is in fact coercing them; it's not.
I am not bothered by doing this to a nonhuman regardless of whether they consent. Obviously, they don't consent. I don't care.
Minor nit... I'm a roboticist and RF engineer (EECS). Currently I'm (basically) a web programmer. I'm not a biologist.
EDIT: Per your edits... you are wrong. "Facts" and "cruelty" may be orthogonal, but "responsible scientific exploration" and "cruelty" are not.
Sorry to have misunderstood your profession; I'm not going to edit previous post(s) because my false belief significantly informed my arguments and rhetoric. Obviously, not being a biologist, this doesn't make you protectionist, but I still deeply disagree with what you've said, and though some of what I said doesn't apply to you particularly, I feel it has some general validity.
Maybe your university was different, but at the University of California, no IRB approval is necessary for invertebrates. This is part of what makes fruit flies such attractive model organisms (nb I am a fruit fly biologist).
Edit: I once read about the creators of Roboroach defend the idea. I still didn't agree (It's OK for things I disagree with to exist in the world). Their kickstarter is successful so I guess enough people approve the idea.
Also I liked how the kicstarter page made Roboroach creator's words look like they are Mashable's.
On Roboroach Kickstarter
Mashable - "... the RoboRoach is not a toy, but rather a learning tool."
On Masahble
Gage and Marzullo underline the fact that the RoboRoach is not a toy, but rather a learning tool.
The creators are probably truly passionate about their field of work, want it to be just an educational tool and maybe they are right. But I just can't tell this apart from a PR plaster.
I agree with you about torture, but mitigate that with the lower life form status of cockroaches. I wouldn't support the same thing done to rats, octopus, etc., all things being equal (although I'm ok with less intrusive or more beneficial things done to higher life forms; in the limit, final medical testing on monkeys and humans).
While I tend to the more animal rightsy end of the spectrum I tend to agree that putting this on a cockroach isn't too troubling from the point of view of the bug. But does it lead to beetles in vending machines[1] or live turtles in tiny pouches[2]?
I don't think we're creating a generation of kids who'll go on to re-create ZippoCat, but it's worth some thought.
[1] http://www.theguardian.com/uk/1999/aug/11/jonathanwatts
[2] http://www.geekosystem.com/chinese-turtles-fish-keychains/
[2] http://www.snopes.com/critters/crusader/keyrings.asp
The cockroach backpack is not something I'd consider appropriate for young children, but for teenagers/etc., it seems like a pretty reasonable thing. If it exposed an API and did two way communication/logging it would be a lot more interesting.
Maybe in both cases (keychain and current-backpack), it's primarily the uselessness of it which is most objectionable.
I'd have no problem with a device that kills cockroaches faster. I am, however, against cruelty.
An abortion is also OK on the same grounds: a fetus before 3 months of gestation is definitely not sentient, and killing it could prevent a great deal of hardship. To be clear, I think abortion is horrible, but it could be the least bad option available.
For this cockroach control toy, it's not clear that it causes the cockroach any pain, but it sure looks like torture. The potentially utility of it looks rather low as well. I can see that it could be useful for learning (and maybe some science as well) but I suspect at lot of people will buy it just for entertainment. That is what makes me very uncomfortable about this device.
[1]: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_slaughter
We had a company like that over here - huntingdon life sciences (UK) which as awareness of their activities spread, had regular potests at their offices, preventing workers from working. Once scientists addresses started making public appearance, things very quickly escalated.