Bees make decisions better and faster than we do, for the things that
matter to them
Date:
July 10, 2023
Source:
Macquarie University
Summary:
Research reveals how millions of years of evolution has engineered
honey bees to make fast decisions and reduce risk.
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FULL STORY ========================================================================== Honey bees have to balance effort, risk and reward, making rapid and
accurate assessments of which flowers are mostly likely to offer food
for their hive.
Research published in the journal eLifetoday reveals how millions of
years of evolution has engineered honey bees to make fast decisions and
reduce risk.
The study enhances our understanding of insect brains, how our own brains evolved, and how to design better robots.
The paper presents a model of decision-making in bees and outlines the
paths in their brains that enable fast decision-making. The study was
led by Professor Andrew Barron from Macquarie University in Sydney,
and Dr HaDi MaBouDi, Neville Dearden and Professor James Marshall from
the University of Sheffield.
"Decision-making is at the core of cognition," says Professor
Barron. "It's the result of an evaluation of possible outcomes, and
animal lives are full of decisions. A honey bee has a brain smaller than
a sesame seed. And yet she can make decisions faster and more accurately
than we can. A robot programmed to do a bee's job would need the back
up of a supercomputer.
"Today's autonomous robots largely work with the support of remote
computing," Professor Barron continues. "Drones are relatively brainless,
they have to be in wireless communication with a data centre. This
technology path will never allow a drone to truly explore Mars solo --
NASA's amazing rovers on Mars have travelled about 75 kilometres in years
of exploration." Bees need to work quickly and efficiently, finding
nectar and returning it to the hive, while avoiding predators. They need
to make decisions. Which flower will have nectar? While they're flying,
they're only prone to aerial attack.
When they land to feed, they're vulnerable to spiders and other predators,
some of which use camouflage to look like flowers.
"We trained 20 bees to recognise five different coloured 'flower
disks'. Blue flowers always had sugar syrup," says Dr MaBouDi. "Green
flowers always had quinine [tonic water] with a bitter taste for
bees. Other colours sometimes had glucose." "Then we introduced each
bee to a 'garden' where the 'flowers' just had distilled water. We filmed
each bee then watched more than 40 hours of video, tracking the path of
the bees and timing how long it took them to make a decision.
"If the bees were confident that a flower would have food, then they
quickly decided to land on it taking an average of 0.6 seconds)," says
Dr MaBouDi. "If they were confident that a flower would not have food,
they made a decision just as quickly." If they were unsure, then they
took much more time -- on average 1.4 seconds - - and the time reflected
the probability that a flower had food.
The team then built a computer model from first principles aiming to
replicate the bees' decision-making process. They found the structure
of their computer model looked very similar to the physical layout of
a bee brain.
"Our study has demonstrated complex autonomous decision-making with
minimal neural circuitry," says Professor Marshall. "Now we know how
bees make such smart decisions, we are studying how they are so fast
at gathering and sampling information. We think bees are using their
flight movements to enhance their visual system to make them better at detecting the best flowers." AI researchers can learn much from insects
and other 'simple' animals. Millions of years of evolution has led to incredibly efficient brains with very low power requirements. The future
of AI in industry will be inspired by biology, says Professor Marshall,
who co-founded Opteran, a company that reverse- engineers insect brain algorithms to enable machines to move autonomously, like nature.
* RELATED_TOPICS
o Plants_&_Animals
# Agriculture_and_Food # Food_and_Agriculture #
Insects_(including_Butterflies)
o Matter_&_Energy
# Vehicles # Engineering # Aviation
o Computers_&_Math
# Artificial_Intelligence # Computer_Modeling #
Computer_Science
* RELATED_TERMS
o Honeybee o Beekeeping o Honey o Bee o Africanized_bee
o Pollination_management o Endangered_species o
Characteristics_of_common_wasps_and_bees
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Story Source: Materials provided by Macquarie_University. Note: Content
may be edited for style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. HaDi MaBouDi, James AR Marshall, Neville Dearden, Andrew B
Barron. How
honey bees make fast and accurate decisions. eLife, 2023; 12 DOI:
10.7554/eLife.86176 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230710113824.htm
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