How much brain do you need to be smart? Bees and ants perform marvels as colonies, though each insect has barely any brain. And plants—with no brain at all—exhibit behaviors that, by any definition, count as intelligent. Brace yourself for a mindbending exploration of plants that learn new behaviors and warn their brainless fellows of danger; vines that compete with each other; molds that solve puzzles; and trees that communicate and cooperate through a ‘woodwide web’ of microscopic mycological fibers. Perhaps the real question is, are we smart enough to appreciate the vast range of intelligence that surrounds us?
PARTICIPANTS: Monica Gagliano, Simon Garnier, Thomas Horton, Naomi Leonard, Mark Moffett
MODERATOR: Natalie Angier
MORE INFO ABOUT THE PROGRAM AND
PARTICIPANTS: https://www.worldsciencefestival.com/...
Chapters:
0:00 Program introduction
0:57 Opening film on the study of plant intelligence
3:45 Panelist introductions
5:25 Plant bioacoustics
12:55 Slime mold intelligence
19:40 Interaction between fungi and trees
30:04 Plant memory and learning
44:30 Transmission of memory in slime molds
48:35 Collective intelligence
50:22 Leafcutter ant intelligence
59:04 Swarm behavior
1:06:04 Applying swarm intelligence to robotics
1:13:05 Moving beyond the neuronal model of intelligence
1:16:15 Consciousness
1:18:40 Ethics of our interaction with plants and animals
1:23:05 Environmental effects on collaboration
CREDITS
Produced by Micah Fink
Associate Produced by Matt Carlstrom
Opening film produced / edited by Vin Liota
Music provided by APM
Additional images and footage provided by: Getty Images, Shutterstock, Videoblocks
Recorded at New York University
The Big Ideas Series is supported in part by the John Templeton Foundation.
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