Scientists Breed Numerically Literate Fruit Flies

Hevva

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Aug 2, 2011
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Scientists Breed Numerically Literate Fruit Flies



After generations of intensive training, a group of fruit flies has been taught to count.

Thanks to its blindly short lifespan, the humble fruit fly has long been a favorite test subject for scientific experiments of various stripes. Their utility lies specifically in how quickly the flies can reproduce, with little baby fruit flies reaching effective maturity only eight days after hatching. By capitalizing on this speedy cycle, an international team of scientists and researchers has been able to do something amazing: they've managed to breed fruit flies capable of counting after 40 generations of teaching.

The team, made up of researchers from the University of California and Canada's Wilfred Laurier University, taught the flies to count by putting them through frequent, 20 minute long "math lessons". The lessons were based on subjecting the flies to two, three, or four flashes of light, with a rapid shaking of the container housing the flies following either the two-flash or four-flash pattern. The first 39 generations of fruit fly, being unable to distinguish between the different flash patterns, would not prepare themselves for the shake that invariably followed these patterns. Generation 40, however, proved capable of distinguishing between the number of flashes and preparing themselves for the shaking they knew would follow two or four flashes of light.

"The obvious next step is to see how [the flies'] neuro-architecture has changed," said Tristan Long, a geneticist from Wilfrid Laurier University. Long added that the likely first step in this process will be to compare the brain structure of the numerically literate flies with that of untrained flies, in the hope that this comparison will enable the researchers to pinpoint precisely the mutation that allows the children of the trained flies to count.

Scientists hope that information gleaned from this investigation will allow them to better understand the mechanical reasons behind human problems with numeracy, including the learning disability dyscalculia [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyscalculia].

The evolution of these mathematically-minded flies adds further weight to the theory that basic numerical skills are ancient, ingrained constructs, something that we see in various places throughout the animal kingdom (The Fly [http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/firstcite/2009/03/26/rspb.2009.0044.xhtml] (seriously, it was horrifying).


Source: Wired [http://blogs.nature.com/news/2012/07/fruit-flies-evolve-number-sense.html]

Image: Wikipedia [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Drosophila_melanogaster_-_side_%28aka%29.jpg]






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Evil Smurf

Admin of Catoholics Anonymous
Nov 11, 2011
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so Jerry, what are we doing FOR SCIENCE! this week? Teaching flies to count Marv, teaching flies to count.
 

kajinking

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Aug 12, 2009
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Seems useless now but the idea is to study the concept of genetic skills which can be passed from generation to generation. Oddly I keep thinking about the Warhammer 40K Orkz who have their entire civilization ranging from technology to economy pretty much built into their genetics so they can always rebuild no matter how hard you try and kill them.
 

McMullen

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Mar 9, 2010
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This is why I like fruit flies. Any time someone says "Evolution is just a theory" I can tell them that we've bred new species of fruit flies from existing ones. Can't get much more concrete than actual controlled evolution in the lab.

While there's no indication in the article that this particular bunch are a new species, it's still a pretty impressive accomplishment. Hope this news gets out to the general public. Probably won't, except perhaps through people who are paranoid about genetic engineering. There's no reason for them to panic yet though, it'll still be a while before they can get flies that are smarter than some humans. I give it 5 years, tops.
 

Tiger Sora

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Aug 23, 2008
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You fools, don't let them escape the lab. They'll teach their brethren. And in a few thousand generations they'll realize they're numerically superior. Than the brain eating begins. 0_o
 

rancher of monsters

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Oct 31, 2010
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First they learn to count, then they learn to make shivs. Next thing you know, we're all working in the fruit mines.

No, I don't know how a fruit mine would work, I'm not one of our fruity overlords.
 

alik44

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Sep 11, 2010
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hmm I'm still betting on the robot overloads but flies will be a great third
 

Baresark

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Dec 19, 2010
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Haha, interesting. The way they describe this, it seems to be an environmentally spurred adaptions, but GOD FORBID that is possible. It's just inconceivable that is even possible!!! NO, it has to be because number lines are as engraved into fruit flies as they are humans! That makes perfect sense!
 

Wolfram23

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Mar 23, 2004
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Just to point it out, the reason most scientists who do research on fruit flies use fruit flies has very little to do with how fast they procreate. Yes, in this case it is helpful, but most fruit fly research is actually DNA/RNA based...

You see, fruit flies have a DNA strand very similar to humans, except that humans have 2 extras for a redundant backup system, which makes it very difficult to do proper science on it. So, use fruit flies.

My girlfriend is a PhD Cell Biology grad student working on fruit flies and RNA. I'm a mechanical guy, so take what I said with a grain of "doesn't know what the fuck he's talking about", but that's basically what she told me.

EDIT: fun fact. A male fruit fly's sperm is actually longer than it's entire body...
 

deserteagleeye

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Sep 8, 2010
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They have crossed the morphogenetic field! Now all that is left is to give them a sudoku puzzle. <--Obscure as hell reference