intelligence without a brain

From: Bertvan@aol.com
Date: Sun Oct 01 2000 - 11:17:22 EDT

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    For those who claim to know exactly what intelligence is -- merely a brain
    function.

    Bertvan
    http://members.aol.com/bertvam

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_944000/944790.stm

    Scientists have discovered that a single-celled organism can negotiate the
    shortest way through a maze.
    It means that some of the lowliest creatures in the plant and animal
    kingdoms, such as slime and amoeba, may not be as primitive as once thought.

    Pieces of slime mould, an amoeba-like organism, were enticed through a
    30-square-centimetre (five-square-inch) maze by the prospect of food at the
    end of the puzzle.

    The researchers believe the slime is exhibiting some form of primitive
    intelligence.

    Toshiyuki Nakagaki of the Bio-Mimetic Control Research Centre, Nagoya, Japan,
    placed pieces of the slime mould Physarum polycephalum in an agar gel maze
    comprising four possible routes.

    Normally, the slime spreads out its network of tube-like 'legs', called
    pseudopodia, to fill all the available space.

    But when two pieces of food were placed at separate exit points in the
    labyrinth, the organism squeezed its entire body between the two nutrients.

    It adopted the shortest possible route, effectively solving the puzzle.

    'Cellular computation'

    Announcing their findings in the journal Nature, the researchers say they
    believe the organism changed its shape to maximise its foraging efficiency
    and therefore its chances of survival.

    The meal of ground oat flakes led to a local increase in contraction of the
    organism's tube-like structures, propelling it towards the food.

    "This remarkable process of cellular computation implies that cellular
    materials can show a primitive intelligence," the team writes in Nature.

    Slime mould is one of a group of single- to multi-celled organisms
    traditionally classified as fungi but having characteristics of both plants
    and animals.

    They reproduce by spores, but their cells can move like an amoeba and they
    feed by taking in particles of food.

    Some types of slime mould are the bane of gardeners, forming a jelly-like
    surface on grass.

     
         
     



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