254
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Research Articles

Military buzz: race, robots and insects

References

  • Arquilla, J. (2009, February 19). The coming swarm: Counterterrorism. International Herald Tribune.
  • Bar-Cohen, Y. (2006). Biomimetics – using nature to inspire human innovation. Bioinspiration and Biomimetics, 1(1), 1–12. doi:https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-3182/1/1/P01.
  • Bar-Cohen, Y., & Breazeal, C. L. (2003). Biologically inspired intelligent robots. Bellingham, WA: SPIE Publications.
  • Bean, A. (2002). Female impersonation in Nineteenth-Century American blackface minstrelsy. [NYU PhD]. Performance Studies.
  • Benard, J., Stach, S., & Giurfa, M. (2006). Categorization of visual stimuli in the honeybee Apis mellifera. Animal Cognition, 9(4), 257–270. doi:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-006-0032-9.
  • Beni, G. (2005). From swarm intelligence to swarm robotics. SAB 2004 International Workshop, Santa Monica, CA; United States: 9.
  • Benyus, J. (2010, July). Biomimicry in action. TED. Lecture.
  • Benyus, J. M. (1997). Biomimicry: Innovation inspired by nature. New York, Morrow.
  • Bhabha, H. (1994). Of mimicry and man. In The Location of Culture (pp. 121–131). New York, NY: Routledge. 317.
  • Bionetics (2010). Bionetics 2010. 5th International ICST Conference on Bio-Inspired Modelsof Network, Information, and Computing Systems, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  • Bonabeau, E., Dorigo, M., & Theraulaz, G. (1999). Swarm intelligence: From natural to artificial systems. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
  • Bosch, T. (2011, September 20). Film editors, beware: The robots are coming. Slate.
  • Brooks, D. (2007, May 18). The insurgent advantage. New York Times.
  • Brooks, R. (2008, February). Robots will invade our lives. TED. Lecture. 2011.
  • Byrd, J. (2009). In the city of blinding lights: Indigineity, cultural studies, and the errants of colonialist Nostalgia. Cultural Studies Review, 15(2), 13–28.
  • Chow, R. (2002). The protestant ethnic and the spirit of capitalism. New York, NY: Columbia University Press.
  • Dacke, M., & Srinivasan, M. V. (2008, October). Evidence for counting in insects. Animal Cognition, 11(4), 683–689. doi:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-008-0159-y
  • Daily Mail Reporter. (2012, June 19). Is that really just a fly? Swarms of cyborg insect drones are the future of military surveillance. Daily Mail UK.
  • Delcomyn, F. (2001, July 1). Analysis: Engineering aspects of insect motion and how scientists are attempting to imitate that motion through robotics. NPR.
  • Deleuze, G., & Guattari, F. (1980). Becoming-intense, becoming-animal, becoming-imperceptible. In A thousand plateaus: Capitalism and schizophrenia (pp. 232–309). London, UK: Continuum.
  • Dubois, P. (2009). The democratic insect: Productive swarms. Differences, 20(2–3), 36–53. doi:https://doi.org/10.1215/10407391-2009-003.
  • Eaton, K. (2008, May 2). Army plans swarms of military bug-robots, bringing sci-fi to life. Gizmodo.
  • Edwards, P. N. (1996). The closed world: Computers and the politics of discourse in cold war America. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
  • Elie, L. E. (2008, November 21). Termites First, then bin Laden. The Times-Picayune.
  • Fisher, M. (2002, April 1). It’s a new kind of war. Maclean’s.
  • Friedersdorf, C. (2013, February 19). Like a swarm of lethal bugs: The most terrifying drone video yet. The Atlantic.
  • Frisch, K. V. (1967). Honeybees: Do they use direction and distance information provided by their dancers? Science, 158(3804), 1072–1077. doi:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.158.3804.1072.
  • Frisch, K. V. (1968). The role of dances in recruiting bees to familiar sites. Animal Behaviour, 16(4), 531–533. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/0003-3472(68)90047-X.
  • Galloway, A., & Thacker, E. (2007). The exploit: A theory of networks. Minneapolis & London: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Gell, A. (1998). Art and agency: An anthropological theory. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  • Giurfa, M., Zhang, S., Jenett, A., Menzel, R., & Srinivasan, M. V. (2001). The concepts of ‘sameness’ and ‘difference’ in an insect. Nature, 410(6831), 930–993. doi:https://doi.org/10.1038/35073582.
  • Glisson, F. (2013, February 14). Engineering prof creates search-and-rescue bots: Vijay Kumar’s work on quadrotors sheds insight on how networks operate. The Daily Pennsylvanian.
  • Gratch, J. (2012). The sciences of the artificial emotions: Comment of Aylett and Paiva. Emotion Review, 4(3), 266–268. doi:https://doi.org/10.1177/1754073912439781.
  • Haraway, D. J. (1997). [email protected] Meets OncoMouse: Feminism and technoscience. New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Haraway, D. J. (2000). How Like a Leaf. New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Hardt, M., & Negri, A. (2004). Multitude:Warand democracy in the age of empire. New York, NY: Penguin.
  • Hooks, B. (1992). Black looks: Race and representation. Boston, MA: South End Press.
  • Huppatz, D. (2015). Revisiting herbert simon’s “science of design.” Design Issues, 31(2), 29–40. doi:https://doi.org/10.1162/DESI_a_00320.
  • JafariNaimi, N. (2018). Our bodies in the trolley’s path, or why self-driving cars must* not* be programmed to kill. Science, Technology, & Human Values, 43(2), 302–323. doi:https://doi.org/10.1177/0162243917718942.
  • Jinnah, J. (2008) Indigenous Issues and Biomimicry: Are they compatible? Yahoo News.
  • Jonsson, R. (2012, February 1). UPenn’s GRASP lab unleashes a swarm of Nano Quadrotors. Gizmodo.
  • Kosek, J. (2010). Ecologies of empire: On the new uses of the honeybee. Cultural Anthropology, 25(4), 650–678. doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1360.2010.01073.x.
  • Kumar, V. (2012, February). Robots that fly … and cooperate. TED. Lecture.
  • Kumar, V., Fink, J., Michael, N., & Kim, S. (2011). Planning and control for cooperative manipulation and transportation with aerial robots. International Journal of Robotics Research, 30(3), 11.
  • Kumar, V., Mellinger, D., & Michael, N. (2012). Trajectory generation and control for precise aggressive maneuvers with quadrotors. International Journal of Robotics Research, 31(5), 664–676. doi:https://doi.org/10.1177/0278364911434236.
  • Laccetti, J. (2006). Towards a Loosening of Categories: Multi-mimesis, feminism and hypertext. Electronic Book Review. Web.
  • Lawrence, B., & Dua, E. (2005). Decolonizing Antiracism. Social Justice, 32(4), 120–143.
  • Lippit, A. M. (2008). Electric animal: Toward a rhetoric of wildlife. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Lott, E. (1993). Love and theft: Blackface minstrelsy and the American working class. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
  • Martin, E. (1991). The egg and the sperm: How science has constructed a romance based on stereotypical male-female roles. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 16I(3), 485–501. doi:https://doi.org/10.1086/494680.
  • Mbembe, A. (2003). Necropolitics. Public Culture, 15(1), 11–40. doi:https://doi.org/10.1215/08992363-15-1-11.
  • Menzel, P., & D’Aluisio, F. (2000). Robo sapiens: Evolution of a new species. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
  • Metzger, S. (2004). Charles Parsloe’s Chinese Fetish: An Example of Yellowface Performance in Nineteenth-Century American Melodrama. Theatre Journal, 56(4), 627–651. doi:https://doi.org/10.1353/tj.2004.0174.
  • “Micro Automomous Systems and Technology”. (n.d.) Retrieved April 25, 2014 from http://www.mast-cta.org/.
  • Million, D. (2014). Therapeutic nations: Healing in an age of indigenous human rights. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona Press.
  • Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Robin L. Riley and Minnie Bruce Pratt. (2008). Feminism and War: Confronting US imperialism. London; New York: Zed Books.
  • Moon, K. R. (2005). Yellowface: Creating the Chinese in American Popular Music nd Performance, 1850s-1920s. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press.
  • Morris, B. (2004). Insects and Human life. Oxford. New York, NY: Berg.
  • Geoffrey Werner-Allen, Geetika Tewari, Ankit Patel, Matt Welsh, and Radhika Nagpal. (2005). Firefly-inspired sensor network synchronicity with realistic radio effects. SyncSys Conference on Embedded Networked Sensor Systems (Proceedings of the Third International Conference).San Diego, California, USA.
  • Neron, B. (Forthcoming 2014). White skin, red meat: Rendering white colonial masculinity and national identity through meat consumption [MA Thesis].
  • Parikka, J. (2008). Insect technics: Intensities of animal bodies. In B. Herzogenrath (Ed.), Unlikely alliance – Thinking the environment(s) with deleuze/guattari (pp. 339–362). Newcastle, UK: Cambridge Scholars.
  • Parikka, J. (2010). Insect media: An archaeology of animals and technology. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Perugini, N., & Gordon, N. (2017). Distinction and the ethics of violence: On the legal constructs of liminal subjects and space. Antipode, 49(5), 1385–1405. doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/anti.12343.
  • Rogers, J. G. D. G. B., Stump, E. A., Young, E. A., & Christensen, H. I. (2012). Cooperative 3D and 2D mapping with heterogenous ground robots. In Unmanned systems technology XIV. Baltimore, MD: United States.
  • RT.com (2012). US military surveillance future: Drones now come in swarms? Retrieved April 21, 2014, from http://rt.com/news/us-drones-swarms-274/
  • Sabanovic, S. (2007). Imagine All the Robots: Developing a critical practice of cultural and disciplinary traversals in social robotics [PhD Thesis]. Science and Technologies Studies, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
  • Schwartz, J., & Chang, K. (2007, November 16). Led by robots, roaches abandon instincts. The New York Times.
  • Scigliano, E. (1998). Insect inspiration. MIT Technology Review, 101(1), 51.
  • Seeley, T. D., Kirk, P., & Passiono, K. M. (2006). Group decision making in honey bee swarms. American Scientist, 94(3), 220–229. doi:https://doi.org/10.1511/2006.59.220.
  • Sharkey, A. (2006). Robots, insects and swarm intelligence. Artifical Intelligence Review, 26(4), 255–268. doi:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10462-007-9057-y.
  • Simpson, L. B. (2017). As we have always done: Indigenous freedom through radical resistance. Minneapolis, Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Singer, P. W. (2009). Wired for War: The robotics revolution and conflict in the Twenty-First Century. New York, NY: Penguin Press.
  • Suchman, L. (2007). Human-Machine reconfigurations. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Suchman, L., Follis, K., & Weber, J. (2017). Tracking and targeting: Sociotechnologies of (in) security. Science, Technology, & Human Values, 31(2), 983–1002. doi:https://doi.org/10.1177/0162243917731524.
  • Taubes, G. (2000). Biologists and engineers create a new generation of robots that imitate life. Science Magazine, 288(5463), 80–83.
  • Taussig, K.-S. (2009). Ordinary genomes: Science, citizenship, and genetic identities. Durham NC: Duke University Press.
  • Taussig, M. T. (1993). Mimesis and alterity: A particular history of the senses. New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Treichler, P. (1999). How to have theory in an epidemic. Durham: Duke University Press.
  • Turing, A. M. (2009). Computing machinery and intelligence. In Epstein, Robert, Roberts, Gary, Beber, Grace (Eds.).Parsing the turing test (pp. 23–65). Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer.
  • Turse, N. (2008). The complex: How the military invades our everyday lives. New York, NY: Metropolitan Books.
  • Twine, R. (2012). Revealing the ‘animal industrial complex’: A concept and method for critical animal studies? Journal for Critical Animal Studies, 10(1), 12–39.
  • Zennie, M. (2013, February 20). Death from a swarm of tiny drones: U.S. Air Force releases terrifying video of tiny flybots that can can hover, stalk and even kill targets. Daily Mail UK.
  • ZhaoHui, C., & HaiYan, T. (2010). Cockroach Swarm Optimization. 2010 2nd International Conference on Computer Engineering and Technology (ICCET), Chengdu.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.