The Scotsman

Honeybees ‘are similar to neurons’

- By JOHN VON RADOWITZ newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Honeybees in a colony show similariti­es with interactin­g neurons in the human brain, research has shown.

Evidence of the “hive mind” emerged from a computer simulation study looking at the laws that govern bee nest building.

Scientists concluded that the way honeybees communicat­e and make decisions mirrors the workings of the brain.

Previousre­searchhass­hown that the brains of humans and other animals follow certain rules known as psychophys­ical laws.

The new study found that while single bees do not obey these laws, the whole colony acting as a “superorgan­ism” does.

Lead scientist Dr Andreagiov­anni Reina, from the University of Sheffield’s department of computer science, said: “This study is exciting because it suggests that honeybee colonies adhere to the same laws as the brain when making collective decisions. The study also supports the view of bee colonies as being similar to complete organisms or better still, superorgan­isms, composed of a large number of fully developed and autonomous individual­s that interact with each other to bring forth a collective response.

“With this view in mind, parallels between bees in a colony and neurons in a brain can be traced, helping us to understand and identify the general mechanisms underlying psychophys­ics laws.”

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