From bees to robots: The new power of swarm intelligence | DW Documentary
Researchers are investigating how animals behave in swarms. Their findings are being applied to robotics, logistics and new models of participation — and are opening up new perspectives for business and democracy.
The “Imaging Hangar” at the Centre for the Advanced Study of Collective Behavior (CASAB) at the University of Konstanz is a 225-square-metre hall equipped with cameras, sensors and a 3D environment — one of the largest swarm research laboratories in the world. “Not all swarms are driven by the same motivation,” explains Iain Couzin, Director of the Institute of Behavioral Biology and spokesperson for CASAB. One of his surprising findings: “Locusts flee out of fear of being eaten by their own kind.”
The “Artificial Life Lab” in Graz offers deep insights into the life of the queen bee. As part of the EU research project “RoboRoyale”, biologist Thomas Schmickl observes the inner circle of a bee colony at close quarters using a robot equipped with a camera and artificial intelligence. For decades, he’s been using technology to decipher the logic of swarms. A mini-robot swarm demonstrates how young bees make faster and better decisions when working as a group.
Melanie Schranz is researching how the swarm principle could optimize a semiconductor factory in Carinthia at the “Lakeside Labs” in Klagenfurt. Products that behave like bees independently seek out the nearest available food source. In this case, that means an available machine for the next stage of production. If one machine breaks down, production continues without the need for intervention from a central command.
The logic of the many applies not only to technology, but also to society. At the “Complexity Science Hub” in Vienna, psychologist Mirta Galesic demonstrates that diversity, independence and openness are crucial to collective intelligence. She refers to this as collective adaptability.
And even democracy can be improved. “Today, it’s often a narrow majority that decides how resources are used – this leads to cronyism and discontent,” warns physicist and sociologist Dirk Helbing. At ETH Zurich, he is researching new ways of participatory decision-making. “Participatory budgeting”, for example, is already being trialed in many cities.
The documentary offers a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes of swarm research and highlights its potential for business and democracy.
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Video “From bees to robots: The new power of swarm intelligence | DW Documentary” was uploaded on 07/01/2026 by DW Documentary Youtube channel.


































lol
love the dancers
wow
Excellent presentation, thank you
Intersting ❤
I highlighted these guys on my channel months ago!
I am glad they are improving
😅In other words, this swarm intelligence could also be applied at the national supply chain level—or even on a global scale—to make supply chains far more efficient.
On one hand, it could significantly accelerate economic development, improve coordination, and optimize the flow of goods and resources. On the other hand, I also see potential risks associated with this technology.
For example, governments could use it for large-scale surveillance of their citizens. In countries with limited democratic freedoms, it could be used to suppress political opposition, monitor dissent, and concentrate economic and political power in the hands of a few rather than benefiting society as a whole.🎉
Every documentary produced by DW is a must-watch to me.
2:17 Everything I don't agree with is swarm stupidity said by an individual. The irony is lost…
Swarm stupidity indeed !
I remember when multidisciplinarity became a scientific trend 10–20 years ago, or maybe even earlier, and today I often ask myself if we have gone too far, mixing far too much, and if it is not time to return to a purer, distilled science with more empirical and tangible results.
If there is a topic that helps DW justify the existence of a bunch of dancing metrosexuals, you can bet they will make a documentary about it.
Just kidding, good job DW
Honey is delicious
There is no perfect group. No perfect system. No perfect country. However, although some groups/countries/systems are imperfect, what we need to consider, I believe, is the results, innovation, the productivity of these groups.
The idea that some collectives, as imperfect as they may be, can produce an end result of great importance, scientific, societal or both.
Impossible for this coordination to happen by chance in a billion years.
"The visual style and pacing in this story are incredible! I'm also exploring AI-driven sci-fi storytelling on my channel, 'Memories VERSE', and would love to hear your thoughts on my latest episode."😊
just waiting to her dunia sasa imeisha
the title says new.. but without swarm intelligence how could you be presenting this documentary
Fascinating documentary.
just waiting to hear about robot bee swarms like that Black Mirror episode where they deleted people posting hashtags on Twitter so I can prepare properly.
2:03 he said humans haven't learned to live in swarms. He's clearly never been to a major urban city like NYC or Tokyo. It's just too large a scope for him because he's IN the human swarm.
3:32 "the stupidity of the masses" I ponder this theory daily.
27:31 this is clearly a bee swinger party happening
The goal is to eat your friend, to look good in group.