Date: June 5, 2019
Source: RMIT University
We've
learned bees can understand zero and do basic math, and now a new study shows
their tiny insect brains may be capable of connecting symbols to numbers.
Researchers
have trained honeybees to match a character to a specific quantity, revealing
they are able to learn that a symbol represents a numerical amount.
It's a
finding that sheds new light on how numerical abilities may have evolved over
millennia and even opens new possibilities for communication between humans and
other species.
The
discovery, from the same Australian-French team that found bees get the concept
of zero and can do simple arithmetic, also points to new approaches for
bio-inspired computing that can replicate the brain's highly efficient approach
to processing.
The RMIT
University-led study is published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society
B.
Associate
Professor Adrian Dyer said while humans were the only species to have developed
systems to represent numbers, like the Arabic numerals we use each day, the
research shows the concept can be grasped by brains far smaller than ours.
"We
take it for granted once we've learned our numbers as children, but being able
to recognise what '4' represents actually requires a sophisticated level of
cognitive ability," Dyer said.
"Studies
have shown primates and birds can also learn to link symbols with numbers, but
this is the first time we've seen this in insects.
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