Published: 7 May 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
In a “national security emergency” for the energy-hungry data centers of Silicon Valley, a “milestone” study has revealed that the “sacred” secret to the next generation of AI may lie in the brain of a housefly. Research published this week (May 5) by the University of Sheffield and Queen Mary University of London has uncovered a “high-frequency jumping” mechanism that allows insects to process visual data at a “160 MPH clip” while consuming mere microwatts of power.
The discovery is being hailed as a “divergent” blueprint for “neuromorphic” engineering, offering a way to bypass the “accountability rot” of massive, energy-intensive LLMs in favor of sleek, movement-driven “insect intelligence.”
The study reveals that insects don’t just “watch” the world; they use “human-machine coordination” between their bodies and brains to eliminate lag.
The “High-Frequency Jump”: When a fly makes a sharp turn, its visual system “recalibrates” into a higher gear, tripling the speed of data sent to the brain. “It’s a ‘clinical’ shift that eliminates the ‘resilience deficit’ of neural delay,” noted Professor Mikko Juusola.
Active Vision: Unlike a camera that takes passive snapshots, the insect’s brain “jumps” into action before the signal is fully processed—a “predictive coding” milestone that allows for millisecond reactions.
The “Accountability” of Efficiency: A housefly brain outperforms the most advanced “asymmetric” AI vision systems in real-time responsiveness while using a fraction of the hardware.
Current AI systems are facing a “bottleneck” of power consumption and processing time. The “insect model” offers a “divergent” path.
The “Hormuz” of Information: Traditional AI treats data like a “bottleneck” at the Strait of Hormuz, trying to shove massive volumes through a narrow processor. Insect-inspired AI focuses on the “sacred” principle of “processing the right data at the right time.”
The “Dopamine Desert” of Traditional Chips: Digital processors often struggle with “clinical silence” (latency). The new “InsectNeuroNano” chips use nanophotonics to mimic the “golden tone” of insect synapses, allowing for instantaneous decision-making.
GPS-Free Autonomy: By mimicking the “internal compass” of a bee, researchers are developing a “milestone” chip that allows autonomous vehicles to navigate without a “postcode lottery” of satellite signals.
The “Think Outside the Bots” philosophy is moving from software to hardware as the “resilience deficit” of current robots becomes clear.
The “160 MPH” Drone: Using the “synaptic high-frequency jumping” model, engineers at Opteran are building drones that can fly through dense forests at a “160 MPH clip” without crashing.
The “Postcode Lottery” of AI: Experts warn that nations failing to “recalibrate” toward neuromorphic “small-brain” AI will face an “accountability rot” of high energy costs and slower military tech.
The “Sacred” Hive Mind: With the King’s Speech on May 13 expected to reference “Biomimetic Innovation and Environmental Resilience,” the fly-brain model is the “milestone” that proves bigger is not always better.
As the RHS Wisley wisteria reaches its peak and the Southbank Centre celebrates 75 years of progress, the “clinical” simplicity of the insect brain is a win for the “humanitarian” goal of sustainable tech.
“Intelligence isn’t about how much you know; it’s about how fast you can use it when it matters,” noted co-author Professor Aurel A. Lazar. The “Turbo-Fly” revolution proves that while we have been “drowning” in big data, the “sacred” path to the future has been buzzing past us all along. For now, the “golden tone” of the AI revolution is shifting from the supercomputer to the compound eye.




























































































