The experiment was run multiple times with different variations: a single ant, a group of about seven ants, and a larger group of around 80 ants; and a single person, a group of six to nine people, and a larger group of 26 people. Humans were instructed to hold the load only by handles that were carefully placed to mimic how the object would be held by ants, and the handles had sensors for measuring the pulling force applied by each person. In some of the runs, humans were not allowed to communicate verbally or with gestures, and in some trials, they even wore masks and sunglasses to avoid nonverbal communication. Each trial run was videotaped for analysis.

It should come as no surprise that humans had the edge as individuals, given their superior cognitive abilities; as communicating groups, they also easily beat the ants at finding the optimal solution. And large groups of ants performed much better than individual ants. However, the picture changed when humans were limited in their ability to communicate; large groups of ants often actually performed better than humans in several runs, thanks to their emergent collective memory that helped them avoid repeated mistakes and maintain a particular direction of motion.

  • @[email protected]
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    628 days ago

    Neat experiment, but I’m not clear how they incentivized the ants to attempt this? I doubt it played a significant part in the ants accomplishing the goals, but it is something nagging at my brain as I chew on this.

    • @mojofrododojo
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      328 days ago

      it’s a common reward system where they start with a small object, and when the ants move it to a target location, they’re rewarded with cocaine. over time the researchers increase the size of the object moved, then add obstacles gradually, while increasing the amount of cocaine rewarded.

      once you get the ants hooked on coke the next few phases go pretty quickly. the tricky part comes when you need to detox a bunch of hyperintelligent coked up ants.

      • @[email protected]
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        128 days ago

        I…wat.

        So a quick google search shows that there’s experiments trying to get ants on to cocaine, but that doesn’t look like common practice?

        Lol, can you pass me links to show thats normal?

          • @[email protected]
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            227 days ago

            Lmao, I kinda figured. Appreciate the follow-up.

            That said, there are apparently efforts to see if we can get ants and other insecta addicted to coke.

            • @mojofrododojo
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              127 days ago

              That said, there are apparently efforts to see if we can get ants and other insecta addicted to coke.

              cartels are looking for bigger #s

  • @mojofrododojo
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    528 days ago

    please tell me one tiny ant was screaming “PIVOT! PIV-OT!”