Sunday May 27, 2012

Brainless, primeval organism helping scientists figure out human intelligence

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Japanese scientists are studying amoeboid yellow slime mold to better understand the mechanism of human intelligence. AFP

HAKODATE —

A brainless, primeval organism able to navigate a maze might help Japanese scientists devise the ideal transport network design. Not bad for a mono-cellular being that lives on rotting leaves.

Amoeboid yellow slime mold has been on Earth for thousands of years, living a distinctly un-hi-tech life, but, say scientists, it could provide the key to designing bio-computers capable of solving complex problems.

Toshiyuki Nakagaki, a professor at Future University Hakodate, says the organism, which he cultivates in petri dishes, “organizes” its cells to create the most direct root through a maze to a source of food.

He says the cells appear to have a kind of information-processing ability that allows them to “optimize” the route along which the mold grows to reach food while avoiding stresses—like light—that may damage them.

“Humans are not the only living things with information-processing abilities,” said Nakagaki in his laboratory in Hakodate in Hokkaido.

“Simple creatures can solve certain kinds of difficult puzzles,” Nakagaki told AFP. “If you want to spotlight the essence of life or intelligence, it’s easier to use these simple creatures.”

And it doesn’t get much more simple than slime mold, an organism that inhabits decaying leaves and logs and munches on bacteria.

Physarum polycephalum, or grape-cluster slime, grows large enough to be seen without a microscope and has the appearance of mayonnaise.

Nakagaki’s work with this slime was recognized by the award of “Ig Nobel” prizes in 2008 and 2010.

The spoof Nobel prizes are given to scientists who can “first make people laugh, and then make them think.”

And, say his contemporaries, slime may sound like an odd place to go looking for the key to intelligence, but it is exactly the right place to start.

Atsushi Tero at Kyushu University, said slime mold studies are not a “funny but quite orthodox approach” to figuring out the mechanism of human intelligence.

He says slime molds can create much more effective networks than even the most advanced technology that man has.

“Computers are not so good at analyzing the best routes that connect many base points because the volume of calculations becomes too large for them,” Tero explained.

“But slime molds, without calculating all the possible options, can flow over areas in an impromptu manner and gradually find the best routes.

“Slime molds that have survived for hundreds of millions of years can flexibly adjust themselves to a change of the environment,” he said. “They can even create networks that are resistant to unexpected stimulus.”

Research has shown slime molds become inactive when subjected to stress such as temperature or humidity changes. They even appear to “remember” the stresses and protectively become inactive when they might expect to experience them.

Tero and his research team have successfully had slime molds form the pattern of a railway system quite similar to the railroad networks of the Kanto region centering Tokyo—which were designed by hard-thinking people.

He hopes these slime mold networks will be used in future designs of new transport systems or electric transmission lines that need to incorporate detours to get around power outages.

Masashi Aono, a researcher at Riken, a natural science research institute based in Saitama, says his project aims to examine the mechanism of the human brain and eventually duplicate that brain with slime molds.

“I’m convinced that studying the information-processing capabilities of lower organisms may lead to an understanding of the human brain system,” Aono said. “That’s my motivation and ambition as a researcher.”

Aono says that among applications of so-called “slime mold neuro-computing” is the creation of new algorithm or software for computers modeled after the methods slime molds use when they form networks.

“Ultimately, I’m interested in creating a bio-computer by using actual slime molds, whose information-processing system will be quite close to that of the human brain,” Aono said.

“Slime molds do not have a central nervous system, but they can act as if they have intelligence by using the dynamism of their fluxion, which is quite amazing,” Aono said. “To me, slime molds are the window on a small universe.”

© 2011 AFP

  • 4

    Farmboy

    “Slime molds do not have a central nervous system, but they can act as if they have intelligence ..."

    Even people with a central nervous system don't often act that way...

  • 5

    gaijinfo

    Brainless, primeval organism helping scientists figure out human intelligence

    They are studying high school kids?

  • 1

    MaboDofuIsSpicy

    thousands of years

    Wrong

  • 0

    sf2k

    just thousands??? haha

  • 4

    gaijinfo

    thousands means more than one thousand.

    10 thousand = thousands

    100 thousand = thousands

    1,000,000,000 thousand = thousands

    So technically, "thousands" is correct, although they could have used "millions" or "billions".

    Kind of like Dr. Evil and his "million"

  • 2

    Ivan Coughanoffalot

    Brainless, primeval organism

    I thought this was an article about my boss...

  • 2

    Laguna

    Memory is a fascinating thing. I'm always amazed at my sunflowers, which manage to turn during the night hours back towards east to catch the earliest rays - how they know which way is east without external stimulus is intriguing. Optimizing environment is, as well; the roads built and maintained by leaf cutter ants in Costa Rica amazed me - they would build ramps over or tunnel under obstructions in the most direct route available, and travel always outward, right, inward, left.

    This mold may provide a useful tool for understanding memory and response to environmental stimulus, but the mold is not unique in possessing these properties. My guess is that every organism does.

  • 0

    YongYang

    @Laguna: They don't 'know' it's a light response built into the DNA of the cells, these cells, which turn to light, obviously became the dominate successful cell over ions and those establishing themselves as the dominate success story within the sunflower.

  • 0

    Laguna

    YongYang, if you have a viable definition of "knowing," I'd Iike to hear it. Sunflowers are able to act physically in the absence of external stimuli, really based only on their experience, to create a desirable environment; dogs act instinctively based on breed-engineered genetics dictating appropriate action; are humans really much different?

  • 0

    YongYang

    @Lag: They don't have 'experience' they do not 'know'. Those plants that had cells that turned to light will have become the more successful plant... QED. Plants have no cognitive ability. If you need a definition of 'knowing' then, well... Discussion over.

  • 1

    Laguna

    Those plants that had cells that turned to light will have become the more successful plant

    YongYang, you're not reading carefully. The sunflowers greet the morning facing east, then slowly track their leaves for optimal exposure to sunlight until the evening, at which time they are facing west. During the night - night, dark, no sunlight, moonlight unreliable, i.e., no external stimulation - the sunflowers reorient their leaves back eastward. Furthermore, if you raise them in a pot and screw with them by turning the pot, it will take them 4-5 days, but they'll eventually "relearn" which way east is.

    So, yes, they do experience, and they do learn - and relearn; and they do appear to "know." My whole point is the brain-centric conception of cognition may well require some major rethinking.

  • -1

    YongYang

    @Lag: I read and 'understood' your premise. It doesn't hold weight in the scientific community and it has been extensively studied, tested, proven. Plants have no experience holding ability they do not remember only having cells acting to conditions and stimuli. The night turn: Because when it goes dark the light cells realign themselves for the next light. But hey if the idea of triffids and the cognitive potato bakes your mind, keep going and have fun with your life work.

  • 0

    Laguna

    Much depends on what is defined as "cognition" - from L. cognoscere "to get to know, to recognize." Anthropocentrism trivializes what is a revolutionary idea: that the core of cognition is cellular-based. If plants "have no experience holding ability they do not remember only having cells acting to conditions and stimuli" and yet "the light cells realign themselves for the next light," on what stimuli are they acting?

    Even amongst humans, "cognition" is displayed in multifaceted ways, from base reactions determined by fundamentals such as self-preservation and procreation to higher areas such as the uniquely human ability for abstraction. Whether and how such "layers" of cognition interact to create what you know as you is at the frontier of science; the scientific community has no basis to achieve consensus on a field in its infancy.

    Indeed, it would be strange if it were otherwise, if "cognition" were like positive and negative, that it suddenly appeared as opposed to slowly evolved and reinforced itself. It would make humans less, not more, to think so; it would make us Deus ex machina rather than the much more fascinating, complex condominium of an existence that I suspect we are. And truly, what we term "cognition" is likely a drop in the bucket of what is possible. Civilizations far more advanced than Homo sapiens might well regard us as we regard plants.

  • 0

    gaijinfo

    Every time I spill water, it always goes downhill, even when "downhill" is a different direction each time. How does it know which way is down?

  • -1

    Laguna

    Every time I spill water, it always goes downhill, even when "downhill" is a different direction each time. How does it know which way is down?

    What would be more interesting is if it did not always go downhill - if it went in the direction that its DNA told it would be the optimal direction for its survival and procreation chances, and if that DNA "memory" evolved over time. But water has gone downhill since the first drop fell on our newly-cooled planet, and the last drop left on what will be a burned-out cinder will do the same.

  • 0

    Himajin

    if you raise them in a pot and screw with them by turning the pot, it will take them 4-5 days, but they'll eventually "relearn" which way east is.

    Interesting! I've never raised sunflowers, and didn't know that!

  • -2

    Laguna

    Himajin, it makes a great elementary school science experiment. I buy my seeds at the 100 Yen Shop - look in the hamster department. Much cheaper than at a nursery, but the grow just as well.

  • 0

    Virtuoso

    Brainless, primeval organism helping scientists figure out human intelligence

    From the headline I thought this was going to be an American political gag...

  • 2

    Foxie

    I am pretty amazed about the intelligence of my Black Tetra fish. Everytime I shake the yellow fish food container, they all gather near the spot where I feed them, looking at me. Gotta find other fun ideas to train them for something. Any good ideas anyone?

  • -2

    Laguna

    Any good ideas anyone?

    Cold calling. Decorative fish excel at cold calling.

  • 1

    Ah_so

    A brainless, primeval organism able to navigate a maze might help Japanese scientists devise the ideal...

    ...light entertainment show?

    ...way of dealing with disasters?

    ...method of learning foreign languages?

    ...way to sort out the economy?

    The possibilities are endless.

  • 1

    whiskeysour

    Aono says that among applications of so-called “slime mold neuro-computing” is the<

    Ahhhhhh sooooka !!! Scientists are talking about Ichiro Ozawa. Only he can produce " slime mold "

  • 0

    Himajin

    Thanks, Laguna, I'll keep that in mind!

  • 0

    Weasel

    Why not just watch drunken businessmen navigate themselves onto vacant seat on a packed train going home? No microscope is needed to witness that brainless action.

  • 1

    655321

    Egon Spengler would be proud.

  • 2

    Reckless

    So they found the origin of politicians.

  • 0

    illsayit

    brainless

  • 0

    miyazawa3

    complicated... I don't understand...

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