Curiosity discovery and gecko feet Robert Full

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

Nearly every one of your science classes

starts off with the scientific method.

You recognize this?

Ask a question,

form a hypothesis,

perform an experiment,

collect data,

draw conclusions,

and then memorize a bunch of facts.

This is really boring!

Science is not a simple recipe in a cookbook,

and learning is not memorizing facts for tests.

Yet, that is exactly what we do.

We have to change this!

We have to look at how curiosity can ultimately benefit society

by looking towards tomorrow,

by going through a path from involvement

to imagination

to invention

to innovation.

And I’d like to illustrate this by telling you the real story

about how we discovered how geckos stick.

First you need to get involved.

You need to do curiosity-driven research yourself.

We know that learning by being an active researcher

is the best way to learn.

Imagine being in my lab

and trying to discover how geckos stick.

“Here is one of our subjects.

This is a crested gecko.

We are going to put the gecko on glass

and we’re going to use a high speed camera

that can capture up to 1,000 pictures in one second.

There he goes.

OK, record it.

There’s the animal’s toes.”

“So how do their feet stick and unstick so quickly?”

How do they do this?

We wonder, it’s kind of crazy, right?

It’s hard to believe.

Well it turns out, it was already known that the geckos have hairy toes,

and those hairs are really small compared to your hair,

and the little tips at the end are even smaller.

Well, my student Tanya,

who is not much older than some of you when she did this,

a sophomore undergraduate,

tried to figure this out,

and we told that her that in order to do this,

you’d have to measure the force of a single hair.

Though we kind of only did this jokingly

because these hairs are so small,

we didn’t think it was possible.

But Tanya didn’t know that,

and she went on to build the simplest,

most beautiful measurement device ever.

Here it is:

she took one of those tiny little hairs

and put it on to a probe,

and then she began pushing it into the metal beam.

Now she was very frustrated for months - it didn’t stick.

But she had figured out she had to orient it

just like the gecko grabs on,

and then it worked!

And there’s the little split ends grabbing the beam in that little window.

And then she did something magical:

for the first time ever,

she measured the force of a single gecko hair

that allowed her to discover

a completely new way to stick to something,

something no human has ever known before.

They have hairy little toes,

huge numbers of hairs,

and each hair has the worst case of split ends possible,

100 to 1,000 nano-tips that an animal has on one hair,

and 2 billion total,

and they don’t stick by glue,

or by suction,

or by velcro.

It was discovered that they stick by inter-molecular forces alone,

by van der Waals forces,

and you’ll learn this in Chemistry and Physics, if you take it.

It’s unbelievable!

It’s a whole new way of thinking about making an adhesive!

Well, this isn’t the end of the story,

there are still mysteries.

Why are the gecko’s feet looking like this?

They have bizarre toes and we don’t know why.

If you go into a museum and look at each gecko species,

you see they have all different hairs,

different lengths, and thicknesses, and patterns.

Why?

I don’t know!

But you should come to Berkeley and help me figure this out.

It’s just about right, so, apply.

But it’s a mystery.

There is even more stuff that is unknown.

This tarantula also has hairs

and can stick this way, too,

but recently it was found that they also can secrete silk from their feet,

not just their behind, like you know they do.

And even more recently, my graduate student Ann showed

that all spiders can secrete glue,

and we know nothing about this glue

except it was around way before this guy,

millions of years before.

So don’t stop at the discovery,

next imagine the possible uses for society.

Here is the first human supported by a gecko-inspired adhesive.

This is my former graduate student, Kellar Autumn,

who is professor at Lewis and Clark,

offering his second born child for the test.

And she’s a very good sport about it!

Now imagine all the things you could make from this,

not only adhesives, but products in sports,

and biomedicine,

technology,

robotics,

toys,

automotive,

fashion,

clothes,

and yes, even hair pieces.

I swear to you, we got a call from Michael Jackson’s hairdresser

about hair pieces before he passed away.

Who would have guessed from studying geckos?!?

Next, invent a game-changing technology, device, or product.

Like my engineering colleague at Berkeley, Ron Fearing, did

when he made one of the first synthetic, self-cleaning dry adhesives

after the simplest version that you see in animals.

Believe it or not, right now, because of this work,

you can make your own synthetic gecko nano-tape

by nano-molding with just a few parts,

and here’s the recipe that we can give you.

It’s been incredible since we made this discovery

of all the papers and the work

and the different ways to make it,

it’s emerging into a billion dollar industry.

And who would have imagined that it started

because we were curious about how geckos can run up walls.

Next you need to innovate,

create a business that ultimately benefits society.

Did you know that there are 6 million people per year that have chronic wounds,

2 million develop an infection,

and infections account for 100,000 hospital deaths?

Imagine if you could build a company that could produce

a gecko-inspired band-aid

that would remove the pain and suffering.

Just a simple invention.

If you look at the last three great earthquakes,

over 700,000 people were trapped and lost their lives.

Imagine the company that made a search-and-rescue robot

inspired from a gecko

that could move anywhere

and quickly find individuals that have been trapped,

that sometimes survive as long as two weeks.

There is a gecko-inspired robot, StickyBot,

from the Stanford group,

that can grab on to any surface.

Now we ran our own, for TED, Mini Bio-inspired Design Challenge

to get you to think about these kinds of products.

We have a winner.

Here’s the winner.

The winner came up with this design called StickySeat.

Really clever.

It’s a seat that is not only comfortable,

but it aids a seat belt, if you were in an accident,

in terms of keeping your seat and moving.

This is brilliant!

We didn’t think about this,

although we might think about patenting it now,

but there is a winner for this,

and the winner, and you can’t,

you can’t make up something like this,

the winner’s name

is Harry.

Where’s Harry?

Harry, come here, we have a prize for you.

Where’s Harry?

Harry!

Come here!

We have a crested gecko for you

that has very cool hairs on it.

Congratulations for Harry!

Excellent job!

So don’t worry, if you missed out on this, it’s OK

because we are doing another design challenge

working with the San Diego Zoo.

They’re developing a best ideas project in San Diego,

but it’s going to go national.

And I’ll leave you with a fact that you should keep being curious

because curiosity-based research leads to the biggest benefits,

as we showed you in our example,

and you can make a difference

now

because like Tanya,

you don’t know what can’t be done.

Thank you.

抄写员:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

几乎每一堂科学课都是

从科学方法开始的。

你认得这个?

提出问题,

形成假设,

进行实验,

收集数据,

得出结论,

然后记住一堆事实。

这真的很无聊!

科学不是食谱中的简单食谱

,学习也不是为了测试而记忆事实。

然而,这正是我们所做的。

我们必须改变这一点!

我们必须

通过展望明天,

通过从参与

到想象

再到发明

再到创新的路径来研究好奇心如何最终造福社会。

我想通过告诉你我们如何发现壁虎如何坚持的真实故事来说明这一点

首先你需要参与进来。

您需要自己进行好奇心驱动的研究。

我们知道,作为一名积极的研究人员

进行学习是最好的学习方式。

想象一下在我的实验室里

并试图发现壁虎是如何坚持的。

“这是我们的一个主题。

这是一只凤头壁虎。

我们将把壁虎放在玻璃上

,我们将使用一台高速相机

,它可以在一秒钟内捕捉多达 1,000 张照片

。他走了。

好的 ,记录下来。

这是动物的脚趾。”

“那他们的脚怎么能这么快粘又脱呢?”

他们是如何做的?

我们想知道,这有点疯狂,对吧?

难以相信。

原来,大家都知道壁虎的脚趾头上是毛茸茸的,

而且这些毛跟你的头发比起来真的很小,

而且末端的小尖更小。

嗯,我的学生 Tanya,

她做这个的时候比你们中的一些人大不了多少,

一个大二的本科生,

试图弄清楚这个

,我们告诉她,为了做到这一点,

你必须测量力 一根头发。

虽然我们只是开玩笑地

这样做,因为这些头发太小了,

但我们认为这是不可能的。

但 Tanya 并不知道这一点

,她继续制造了有史以来最简单、

最漂亮的测量设备。

就是这样:

她拿起一根细小的

头发放在探头上,

然后开始将它推入金属梁。

现在她几个月来都非常沮丧——它没有坚持下去。

但她发现她必须

像壁虎抓住它一样定位它,

然后它起作用了!

小开叉的末端抓住了那个小窗户里的横梁。

然后她做了一件神奇的事

:有史以来第一次,

她测量了一根壁虎毛发的力量,

这让她发现

了一种全新的方式来粘在某物上,

这是人类以前从未知道的。

它们有毛茸茸的小脚趾,

大量的毛发

,每根毛发都有可能分叉的最坏情况,

动物一根毛发上有 100 到 1,000 个纳米尖端,

总共 20 亿个,

而且它们不会被胶水粘住 ,

或通过吸力,

或通过魔术贴。

人们发现它们仅靠分子间力

,范德华力

而粘附,如果你接受它,你将在化学和物理中学到这一点。

这太不可思议了!

这是制作粘合剂的全新思维方式!

好吧,这不是故事的结局,

还有谜团。

为什么壁虎的脚是这样的?

他们有奇怪的脚趾,我们不知道为什么。

如果你去博物馆看看每个壁虎物种,

你会发现它们都有不同的毛发、

不同的长度、不同的粗细和图案。

为什么?

我不知道!

但是你应该来伯克利帮我解决这个问题。

刚刚好,所以,申请吧。

但这是一个谜。

还有更多不为人知的东西。

这只狼蛛也有毛

,也可以这样粘,

但最近发现它们也可以从脚部分泌丝,

而不仅仅是它们的背后,就像你知道的那样。

甚至最近,我的研究生 Ann

证明所有的蜘蛛都能分泌胶水

,我们对这种胶水一无所知,

除了它在

数百万年前这个家伙之前就已经存在了。

所以不要停留在发现上,

接下来想象一下对社会的可能用途。

这是第一个由壁虎启发的粘合剂支撑的人。

这是我以前的研究生,Kellar Autumn,

他是刘易斯和克拉克大学的教授,

他让他的第二个孩子参加考试。

她是一项非常好的运动!

现在想象一下你可以用它制造的所有东西,

不仅是粘合剂,还有运动产品

、生物医学、

技术、

机器人、

玩具、

汽车、

时尚、

衣服

,是的,甚至是发片。

我向你发誓,迈克尔杰克逊去世前,我们接到了理发师

关于发片的电话。

谁会从研究壁虎中猜到?!?

接下来,发明一种改变游戏规则的技术、设备或产品。

就像我在伯克利的工程同事 Ron Fearing 所做的那样

,他在动物身上看到的最简单的版本之后,制造了第一批合成的、自清洁干粘合剂

信不信由你,现在,由于这项工作,

您可以通过纳米成型制作自己的合成壁虎纳米胶带

,只需几个部分

,这是我们可以为您提供的配方。

这是令人难以置信的,因为我们发现

了所有的论文和工作

以及制作它的不同方法,

它正在成为一个价值十亿美元的产业。

谁会想到它开始

是因为我们对壁虎如何爬墙感到好奇。

接下来,您需要创新,

创建最终造福社会的企业。

您是否知道每年有 600 万人患有慢性伤口,

200 万人感染

,感染导致 100,000 人在医院死亡?

想象一下,如果你能建立一家公司,生产出

一种以壁虎为灵感的创可贴

,可以消除痛苦和痛苦。

只是一个简单的发明。

如果你看看最近的三场大地震,

超过 700,000 人被困并失去了生命。

想象一下,一家公司制造了一个搜救机器人,其

灵感来自壁虎

,壁虎可以移动到任何地方,

并迅速找到被困的人

,有时可以存活两周。

斯坦福大学的一个受壁虎启发的机器人 StickyBot

可以抓取任何表面。

现在,我们为 TED 举办了自己的 Mini Bio-inspired Design Challenge

,让您思考这些产品。

我们有一个赢家。

这是赢家。

获胜者想出了这个名为 StickySeat 的设计。

真是聪明。

这是一个不仅舒适

的座椅,而且它有助于安全带,如果您发生事故,

在保持您的座位和移动方面。

这太棒了!

我们没有考虑过这个,

虽然我们现在可能会考虑申请专利,

但是这个有一个赢家

,这个赢家,你不能,

你不能编造这样的东西

,赢家的名字

是哈利 .

哈利在哪里?

哈利,过来,我们为你准备了奖品。

哈利在哪里?

哈利!

过来!

我们为您准备

了一只有非常酷的毛的凤头壁虎。

祝贺哈利!

很棒的工作!

所以不用担心,如果您错过了这一点,没关系,

因为我们正在与圣地亚哥动物园合作进行另一项设计挑战

他们正在圣地亚哥开发一个最佳创意项目,

但它会走向全国。

我要告诉你一个事实,你应该保持好奇,

因为基于好奇心的研究会带来最大的好处,

正如我们在示例中向你展示的那样

,你可以有所作为

现在

因为像 Tanya 一样,

你不知道什么是不能做的。

谢谢你。