Clockwork-Like 'Computer' Discovered Inside Brainless Microscopic Organism

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Clockwork-Like 'Computer' Discovered Inside Brainless Microscopic Organism
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Tiny single-celled critters obviously don't have room for a brain to tell them how to move in complex ways, so to get about, they usually roll, slither or swim.

have mastered a way to walk brainlessly – scurrying about like insects, with their 14 little appendages., with clockwork-like connections cycling them through a pattern of set states that can be adjusted in response to their environment.biophysicist Ben Larson from the University of California, San Francisco ."They weren't random, and we began to suspect there was some sort of information processing happening.

These protozoans – single-celled organisms with animal-like characteristics – have 14 stingy bundles of cilia that work together as legs called cirri. They can use these cirri to swim and walk while actively hunting for prey.

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