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Rescue Rats to Find Buried Victims

adaminnj writes "Rats are being trained to sniff out the buried victims of earthquakes and bomb blasts and could be sent to search for survivors in the same way as dogs. The idea of being rescued by a rat may not appeal to many people, but they have the advantage of being able to crawl almost anywhere and slip through small holes and crevices. Like dogs, they also have a highly acute sense of smell. But to be successful rescuers, they must be able to home in on victims and signal their position to waiting rescue teams."

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  1. Also for mines by Karamchand · · Score: 5, Informative

    Rats can also be used to search for buried mines. You might want to read this interesting NYT article about it. It was featured on slashdot some months ago, IIRC.

  2. Slowarses! by Lord+Graga · · Score: 2, Informative

    There have been rats in training since a month after september 11th (the year where al-queda struck), maybe even before, and it was in the news back then too. A quick sweep over to google will reveal that.

  3. Article text (in case of /.'ing) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Rescue rats will sniff out buried victims

    JOHN INNES

    RATS are being trained to sniff out the buried victims of earthquakes and bomb blasts and could be sent to search for survivors in the same way as dogs.

    The idea of being rescued by a rat may not appeal to many people, but they have the advantage of being able to crawl almost anywhere and slip through small holes and crevices.

    Like dogs, they also have a highly acute sense of smell.

    But to be successful rescuers, they must be able to home in on their victims and signal their position to waiting rescue teams.

    American scientists have been training rats to find human flesh irresistible.

    They are also developing a radio backpack which will transmit signals from the rats' brains to alert search leaders on the surface.

    A report on the project, funded by the Pentagon's research arm Darpa, appears in New Scientist magazine. Scientists first identified the nerve messages rats generate when they find a scent they are looking for.

    John Chapin, a neuroscientist from the State University of New York, who is taking part in the research, said: "When a dog is sniffing a bomb, he makes a unique movement that the handler recognises. Instead of the rat making a conditioned response, we pick up the response immediately from the brain."

    Each rat has electrodes implanted in three areas of the brain which process odour signals, plan movements and experience rewards.

    The scientists stimulated the reward centre to generate feelings of pleasure when the rodent's nose picked up a whiff of human flesh. In this way, the rats were trained to seek out human odours.

    They were then set to forage for a target meal while their brainwaves were monitored.

    The "aha!" moment when a rat discovered the source of the smell was identified by a particular brainwave pattern.

    As well as being able to track a rat's position from signals relayed by the radio transmitter, rescuers will also know when to start digging.

    Software being developed by the scientists will recognise the "aha!" moment when the rat has found its target.

    The team hopes to create a working rat rescue system within nine months.

  4. check out NewScientist by bodrell · · Score: 4, Informative
    This story hit http://www.newscientist.com/ a couple days ago.

    If you like stories about animals sniffing things, they also have stories about giant rats sniffing out tuberculosis and dogs sniffing bladder cancer just to name two recent stories. I check out their news section first thing in the morning, then the nytimes, then slashdot.

    --
    Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
  5. Re:Rodents in general by desertfish · · Score: 2, Informative

    Domestic rats don't just "bite victims." They're handled by humans from birth and become as docile and friendly as a well-treated dog. Mass media makes people think rats are vicious. Any wild animal will defend itself if you fuck with it.