Paper wasps have flair for recalling faces
December 4th, 2011 - 2:49 pm ICT by IANSWashington, Dec 4 (IANS) Paper wasps, possessing brains less than a millionth of the size of that of humans, have evolved a similar face-learning abilities, a study reveals.
“Wasps and humans have independently evolved similar and very specialized face-learning mechanisms, despite the fact that everything about the way we see and the way our brains are structured is different,” said graduate student Michael Sheehan.
Sheehan worked with evolutionary biologist Elizabeth Tibbetts from the University of Michigan on the face-recognition study.
“That’s surprising and sort of bizarre,” said Sheehan.
The study marks the first time that any insect has demonstrated such a high level of specialized visual learning, said Sheehan, who led the study, the journal Science reported.
In earlier research, Tibbetts showed that paper wasps recognize individuals of their species and behave more aggressively toward wasps with unfamiliar faces, according to a university statement.
In their latest study, Sheehan and Tibbetts trained wasps to discriminate between two different images mounted inside a T-maze, with one image displayed at each end of the top arm of the T.
They found that the paper wasps, which prey on caterpillars, were able to differentiate between two of their own species faster and more accurately than a pair of caterpillar photos of two different geometric patterns or a pair of computer-altered wasp faces.
The paper wasps learned to pick the correct unaltered wasp face about three-quarters of the time.
- Standing out in crowd is beneficial - Oct 16, 2009
- Standing out in crowd better than blending in, claims wasps study - Oct 16, 2009
- Wasps with more spots 'tend to be more ferocious' - Aug 21, 2010
- You can't fool a wasp with a false show of bravado - Aug 21, 2010
- Scientists show how to spot an angry wasp - Aug 20, 2010
- People remember unfamiliar faces best between ages 30 and 34 - Dec 15, 2010
- Sociable wasps better at beating diseases - Jul 12, 2011
- Paper wasps never forget faces - Sep 23, 2008
- Insects resort to mimicry for sheer survival - Dec 19, 2011
- Stress can improve ordinary, unrelated memories: Study - Dec 22, 2010
- Gene study offers clues on memory puzzle - Jul 10, 2011
- Soon, airport facial-recognition software to detect stressed-out tourists - Sep 16, 2010
- A new, giant wasp discovered in Indonesia - Mar 25, 2012
- Neural mechanism that help adapt to new situations discovered - Apr 29, 2010
- Social status in paper wasps is established early in life - May 20, 2010
Tags: brains, caterpillar, caterpillars, earlier research, elizabeth tibbetts, evolutionary biologist, face recognition, flair, geometric patterns, graduate student, insect, journal science, maze, michael sheehan, millionth, paper wasps, three quarters, trained wasps, wasp, wasps