Snails Use Just Two Brain Cells To Make Decisions
Scientists have discovered that
snails solve complex decisions using just two brain cells, in a discovery that
could help engineers develop energy efficient robots.
By attaching electrodes to the brain
circuitry of freshwater snails that were on the hunt for food, researchers
learned the molluscs used only two neurons when they found a tasty lettuce.
Scientists discovered that snails
used controller and motivator neurons to feed back information to each other to
decide whether or not to eat.
The first brain cell let it know it
had discovered food and the second cell decided whether it was hungry.
But if no food was in front of the
snail this part of its brain circuitry shut down, saving energy.
University of Sussex Professor
George Kemenes, who led the research, said "What goes on in our brains
when we make complex behavioral decisions and carry them out is poorly understood.
"Our study reveals for the
first time how just two neurons can create a mechanism in an animal's brain
which drives and optimises complex decision-making tasks.
"It also shows how this system
helps to manage how much energy they use once they have made a decision.
"Our findings can help
scientists to identify other core neuronal systems which underlie similar
decision-making processes.
"This will eventually help us
design the 'brains' of robots based on the principle of using the fewest possible
components necessary to perform complex tasks."
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