A couple of years ago, I recorded a talk on octopus neurobiology.
One of the freakiest things you'll learn, if you watch it, is that an
octopus' "brain" isn't really a centralized thing the way ours is. The
processing capacity is distributed throughout the animal's body. At io9
today, Annalee Newitz writes about
a new study that backs up that idea, demonstrating that disembodied octopus arms react to threats in ways a severed human hand never could.
No comments:
Post a Comment