Saturday, 22 December 2012

Dragonflies have selective attention just like humans

Dragonflies have selective attention just like humans


MELBOURNE Researchers have discovered that dragonflies have brain cells for selective attention, a mechanism which has so far only been demonstrated in primates. Researchers at the University of Adelaide found the first evidence that dragonfly, an invertebrate animal, is capable of higher-level thought processes.
    Using a tiny glass probe with a tip that is only 60 nanometres wide – 1500 times smaller than the width of a human hair – the researchers Steven Wiederman and David O’Carroll have discovered neuron activity in the dragonfly’s brain that enables this selective attention.
    They found that when presented with more than one visual target, the dragonfly brain ‘locks on’ one target and behaves as if the other targets don’t exist.
    “Selective attention is fundamental to humans’ ability to select and respond to one sensory stimulus in the presence of distractions,” Wiederman said.
    “Imagine a tennis player having to pick out a small ball from the crowd when it’s travelling at almost 200kms an hour – you need selective
attention in order to hit that ball back into play,” Wiederman said in a statement.
    “The dragonfly hunts for other insects, and these might be part of a swarm – they’re all tiny moving objects. Once the dragonfly has selected a target, its neuron activity filters out all other potential prey. The dragonfly then swoops in on its prey – they get it right 97 per cent of the time,” he added.
    Researchers believe this brain activity makes the dragonfly a more efficient and effective predator. AGENCIES

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