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Tiny Insect Brains Capable of Huge Feats

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For the first time, researchers from the University’s Discipline of Physiology have worked out how insects judge the speed of moving objects.

| June 17, 2010

Insects may have tiny brains the size of a pinhead, but the latest research from the University of Adelaide shows just how clever they really are.

For the first time, researchers from the University’s Discipline of Physiology have worked out how insects judge the speed of moving objects.

It appears that insect brain cells have additional mechanisms which can calculate how to make a controlled landing on a flower or reach a food source. This ability only works in a natural setting.

In a paper published in the international journal Current Biology, lead author David O’Carroll says insects have well identified brain cells dedicated to analysing visual motion, which are very similar to humans.

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