pull down to refresh

The groups of ants were much better at solving the puzzle than individual ants, exhibiting what the researchers described as “emergent” collective memory—an intelligence greater than the sum of its parts. The groups of humans, on the other hand, often didn’t do better when working together, especially if they weren’t allowed to talk. In fact, multiple people sometimes performed worse than individuals—and worse than the ants.
I found on YT an edited version of the video from the article:
The power of cooperation is very strong, so I'm not surprised that the ants beat us. Someone had already shared this video. #824015
reply
Oh good catch. Will forward part of the sats Missed the slot to edit the post.
reply
117 sats \ 1 reply \ @Aardvark 3 Jan
It looks like the ant video is spead up. I'd like to see how long it actually took vs humans.
reply
The original video inside the article actually says it's 10x speed up...
reply
Ants are like humans in the grand scale of space. We make lil colonies and cities on this lil mound of dirt we call earth and don’t even realize how small we are in space compared to everything around us
reply
Very clever experiment. After looking at the video though, I wonder if the scaling took into account the size of the human body since I saw one maneuver that I think the ants could do due to their tiny size but was blocked because of the size of a human body. Cool experiment either way!
reply