EXON SKEWING. "In addition, both codon and amino acid usage are skewed near exon ends in a way that is consistent with an effect of exonic splice enhancers." https://lnkd.in/drMDPh6 View in LinkedIn
THE LINK. “We argue that slime moulds are powerful model systems for solving several outstanding questions in collective behaviour. In particular, slime mould may hold the key to linking individual-level mechanisms to colony-level behaviours.” https://academic.oup.com/femsre/article-abstract/40/6/798/2400841 View in LinkedIn
LARGE CELLS. “A cellular slime mould Physarum polycephalum is a monstrously large single cell, visible by an unaided eye.” https://lnkd.in/gxgxfjB View in LinkedIn
LARGEST SINGLE CELLED ORGANISM ON EARTH, that can grow to three square meters. They also find the quickest route to food on mazes. Slime molds can drive a robot. https://lnkd.in/gQjgVZg View in LinkedIn
TIME LAPSE of slime mold colony growth over 8 hours, forming a giant fruiting body, a new community structure. https://lnkd.in/gNYfh5m View in LinkedIn
ANT SWARM INTELLIGENCE. “Ant colonies solve mazes using swarm intelligence. Swarm intelligence allows groups of organisms to solve problems that exceed the cognitive capabilities of individuals. Consider the case of an ant colony solving a maze. Many ants begin to walk the maze at random, depositing a trail of volatile pheromones behind them. The ant traffic which happens to flow along the shortest path of the maze can make more return trips (and hence lay more pheromone).” https://academic.oup.com/femsre/article/40/6/798/2400841 View in LinkedIn
SWARM INTELLIGENCE. “The study of collective behaviour aims to understand how individual-level behaviours can lead to complex group-level patterns. Collective behaviour has primarily been studied in animal groups such as colonies of insects, flocks of birds and schools of fish.” https://lnkd.in/gXKQQtM View in LinkedIn
COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR. “Collective behaviour is apparent at all levels of biological organisation; bacteria act together to form rafts, plague-locusts march cohesively in bands, tiny termites build immense, sophisticated structures, swarms of honeybees ‘vote’ democratically for the location of their new home, and flocks of starlings collectively sense the direction of a predator's attack by compression waves propagating through the group.” https://lnkd.in/gxSdyJh View in LinkedIn