meonkeys 6 hours ago

Should be: ...Tested for Impaired Cognition

  • fhars 5 hours ago

    Yeah. How could 1950's science fiction be so wrong?

    • cbdevidal 5 hours ago

      My stupid butt imagined new mutant superpowered insects like the Brain from Pinky and the Brain

      • grues-dinner 2 minutes ago

        Show pitch: Pinky and the Brain but the Brain is a brain bug from Starship Troopers.

      • ghurtado 3 hours ago

        Well, to be fair, that's what that stupid title is designed to make you think

  • layer8 4 hours ago

    They only seem to be testing individual bees though, not the hive mind.

    • folkrav 2 hours ago

      Is there any scientific basis for some kind of shared collective thought I don’t know about? In other words, what’s the “hive mind” if not the collective result of individual minds?

      • AlecSchueler an hour ago

        Changes in behaviour in the individual level might result in an apparent cognitive decline for that individual, but could still benefit the hive as a whole.

        • folkrav 38 minutes ago

          I was asking about the concept of “hive mind”. Is the concept accepted as a “thing”, has it ever been measured in any way, and if yes, what is it?

      • lupire an hour ago

        Why are they testing a whole brain instead of individual neurons? What is a brain if not the collective result of individual neurons?

        • folkrav 43 minutes ago

          The comparison only works if the concept of a “hive mind” is as accepted and defined as the concept of a brain, which is quite literally what I was asking.

alex_suzuki 6 hours ago

Nitpick: the article mentions that the bees are tracked with QR Codes, but I find that hard to believe, given the space constraints. In one photo it looks like it is an ArUco marker.

  • diggan 5 hours ago

    2mm QR codes according to the article:

    > The protocol used at Fukushima is automated. Each bee is equipped with a 2-mm-wide QR Code which is read by a camera, activating the opening of the maze.

    But yeah, doesn't look like a QR code at all, are there possibly different variations of QR codes? Haven't heard about that myself.

    • blueflow 5 hours ago

      I can imagine the journalist referring to all Matrix Codes as "QR".

      • wanderingstan 3 hours ago

        This is it. All matrix codes are now commonly referred to as “QR Codes”. I’ve noticed this especially at airports where both passengers and gate agents refer to the “QR codes” on boarding passes. (Which are IIRC Aztec codes)

      • thaumasiotes 3 hours ago

        In China the normal word is 二维码 "two-dimensional code".

    • ChrisMarshallNY 3 hours ago

      Anyone remember these?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Capacity_Color_Barcode

      Haven't seen one in ages.

      • diggan an hour ago

        We have something similar in Barcelona (maybe entire Spain? Apparently called NaviLens, colored squares rather than triangles) all around public transit points. They're used for blind people to navigate the public transit system :)

        > As users sweep their environment with a smartphone, audio cues allow them to find and center the tag in the phone’s field of view. A shake of the wrist prompts the details contained within the tag to be read out (visually impaired people are often holding a guide dog or cane with their other hand). https://www.technologyreview.com/2019/06/06/135057/these-col...

    • alex_suzuki 3 hours ago

      There‘s MicroQR, which is just a single finder pattern of a regular QR code, with some adjoining data. But it doesn’t look like one.

  • tokai 3 hours ago

    Nitpick: QR code is widely used as a generic term for matrix barcodes.

Thorrez 6 hours ago

>Although the results of the study have yet to be published, scientists are already reporting a decline in insect cognition in the contaminated area of Fukushima Prefecture.

blueflow 6 hours ago

Troll-tier conclusion: Human presence improves cognition in insects

  • IAmBroom 5 hours ago

    Scientific research causes cancer in mice.

    That's actually a fact; there are specific bloodlines prone to cancers.

  • gus_massa 4 hours ago

    I can see a direct relation in this test, but it may be my lack of imagination or knowdledge...

    Anyway, animals in islands without predators lose escape hability, in particular the dodo.

bornfreddy 2 hours ago

Whoever has put the tag on that hornet in the last photo is a hero in my eyes. Things people do for science...

blackoil 6 hours ago

Have we tried increasing cognition by selective breeding. Get mice best at maze to breed 100 descendants and repeat it few times, with varying food supply and survival difficulties.

miohtama 6 hours ago

Teenage Mutant Ninja Bees

jonathaneunice 3 hours ago

Future research should also test for induced meta-insect superpowers.

"Fukushima was a massive disaster. It was also Arthur Buzzby's origin story."

dudeinjapan 6 hours ago

If the bees were exposed to radiation, shouldn't we be testing them for super-powers?

  • blackoil 6 hours ago

    OR try getting teenagers stung by them.

    • MaxZero101 6 hours ago

      The power to make honey and die after using your stinger?

      • IAmBroom 5 hours ago

        The Fantastic 4,000 versus Wasp Man!