improvisation with a teeny tiny brain
Nov. 22nd, 2011 06:38 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Okay, seriously, this is awesome.
In a blog post bearing the fabulous title "Iterating Toward Bethlehem," here is the story of a teeny little spider with "a pinpoint brain with less than a million neurons, somehow capable of mammalian-level problem-solving. And just maybe, a whole new approach to cognition."
More details, and links to the original articles in PDF, are at the link above. ♥ Further sample quote:
Nature is so freaking cool. ♥
In a blog post bearing the fabulous title "Iterating Toward Bethlehem," here is the story of a teeny little spider with "a pinpoint brain with less than a million neurons, somehow capable of mammalian-level problem-solving. And just maybe, a whole new approach to cognition."
More details, and links to the original articles in PDF, are at the link above. ♥ Further sample quote:
[W]e have here a spider who eats other spiders, who changes her foraging strategy on the fly, who resorts to trial and error techniques to lure prey into range. She will brave a full frontal assault against prey carrying an egg sac, but sneak up upon an unencumbered target of the same species. Many insects and arachnids are known for fairly complex behaviors (bumblebees are the proletarian's archetype; Sphex wasps are the cool grad-school example), but those behaviors are hardwired and inflexible. Portia here is not so rote: Portia improvises.
Nature is so freaking cool. ♥