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What Can We Learn From Bee Brains?

What Can We Learn From Bee Brains? content piece image
Harnessed honey bees in front of a 3D model of the bee brain. Credit: University of Otago
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In a discovery which could open new avenues for understanding of the brain, researchers have found similarities between the brain activity of honey bees and humans.

The research revealed that alpha oscillations in bees (the wave-like electrical activity brains generate) have similar properties as in our human brains.

Paul Szyszka, Lecturer in the University of Otago’s Department of Zoology, says “as alpha oscillations are associated with brain functions such as; attention, memory, and consciousness, bee brains may provide new avenues to understanding how our own brains work.”

“Experiments on humans are expensive, logistically difficult, and time consuming. Moreover, recordings from individual identified neurons are not possible in human brains. By studying the brains of bees we can overcome these limitations and apply that knowledge to research, and eventually perhaps even to treatment, of human brains.”

Szyszka, who collaborated with Dr Tzvetan Popov of the University of Heidelberg in Germany, intends to extend the understanding of this fundamental research at the University of Otago.

The study involved regular honey bees from outdoor hives. In the laboratory they were stimulated with odors, with microscopic electrodes recording their brain activity.

“It is fascinating to see how bees can learn to associate odors with food in a similar way to humans. What we want to do now is examine how these alpha oscillations change in different situations. As a neuroethologist, I’m interested in how bees’ alpha oscillations change during natural behaviors, for example when a bee forages or sleeps,” Szyszka says.

Reference

Popov and Szyszka. (2020) Alpha oscillations govern interhemispheric spike timing coordination in the honey bee brain. Proceeding of the Royal Society B. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2020.0115

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