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Can slime be smart? Scientists say brainless blob demonstrated ability to learn

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Physarum polycephalum slime on a forest floor. Scientists say the simple organism demonstrated “habituation learning” in lab experiments. Photo: Wikipedia

What is intelligence? The definitions vary, but all infer the use of a brain, whether in a cat or a human, to learn from experience.

On Wednesday, scientists announced a discovery that turns this basic assumption on its head.

A slime made up of independent, single cells, they found, can “learn” to avoid irritants despite having no central nervous system.

“Tantalising results suggest that the hallmarks for learning can occur at the level of single cells,” the team wrote in a paper published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

For the study, researchers from Belgium and France sought to demonstrate “habituation learning” in a brainless organism.

Habituation learning is when original behaviour changes in response to repeated stimulus - think of a human losing their fear of needles after being repeatedly exposed to them in phobia therapy.

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