An Alligator's Sixth Sense 31
Devil's BSD writes "NPR has this article about how alligators sense their prey. Apparently, those black dots on a alligator are really "dome pressure receptors", which alligators use to detect changes in water pressure caused by ripples in the water. The alligator then does some fancy triangulation, and can then detect precisely where its prey is."
Get the Doctors site here. (Score:2, Informative)
They have some movies in
Sixth Sense? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sixth Sense? (Score:1)
Hogwash (Score:1, Funny)
Not Hogwash (Score:5, Insightful)
Likewise, the alligator simply notices that certain patterns of pressure changes indicate that there is something in the water in a given direction.
Sure, you can describe what is going on with advanced mathematics, but the actual application is done with simple pattern matching.
Re:Not Hogwash (Score:1)
Boggled alligators (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Boggled alligators (Score:4, Informative)
Other senses (Score:2)
And we all know bats use sonar.
What other senses do animals have that we lack?
Re:Other senses (Score:2, Informative)
Some humans can - haidinger's brushes. (Score:2)
http://world.std.com/~mmcirvin/haidinger.html
http://www.dur.ac.uk/~dph0rms/opticsII/notes/le
Re:Other senses (Score:1)
within an electric field that they project around
their bodies.
Re:Other senses (Score:1)
Re:Other senses (Score:1)
other mammals can detect non-volatile chemicals, such as pheromones, which humans are not completely known to detect. they have a vomero-nasal organ which is located just above the roof of the mouth. you can see little holes in the skull where the canal leads to it. humans lack this organ. you can see cats using it through flehman, which is what they do when you see them scrunch their noses and upper lips. they are actually pulling air into the vomero-nasal organ. other mammals use licking and nuzzling to get chemicals into this region.
many animals are much cooler than people normally think, but that's because most people don't know much about them other than what they look like.
Re:Other senses (Score:1)
It is often suggested (a.o. on the Discovery Channel) that animals have superiour senses compared to humans. This statement is IMO a bit blunt; there is no such group as "the animals" compared to "the humans". One could as easily argue that the sense of animals (including humans) have a superiour sense to say, dogs.
Instead some (or many) animals have senses which our superiour to ours but other senses which are less developed than ours. For example, apes are capable of 3D color vision, but nocturnal bats equipped with sonar barely use their eyes.
Which is not to say that there are some very exciting sensory systems in the animal kingdom. There is a great variety in sensory systems over in animals. But I think that a more proper way to look at that is by understanding why an animal posesses such an organ in relation to its life-style, instead of just saying "animals" are better equipped than "humans".
Ears? (Score:2)
Perhaps I'm mistaken, but isn't that essentially what ears do?
Re:Ears? (Score:2)
I'm curious about this "fancy triangulation" though. Does it use a graphing calculator or what?
Re:Ears? (Score:2)
Re:Ears? (Score:2)
When was the last time you saw a triangle? The 2 points of your ears can tell you where the third point is. They're a little close together, and pointing in opposite directions, so they're less accurate than your eyes, but they still do a pretty good job.
Re:Ears? (Score:2)
your left ear hears a sound that's 2 feet away. all points 2 feet away will make a sphere around this ear (with a radius of 2 feet).
your left ear hears a sound 1 foot away. all points from this ear makes a sphere around it (with a radius of 1 foot).
all points where these 2 spheres intersect form a circle.
your brain uses many clues to locate the sound on this circle. two of the ways that it does this is if you move (by turning your head or whatever) or the sound moves. usually your brain just locates it from memory (certain sounds come from certain objects, certain voices come from certain people, etc.)
when you think in three dimensions, it doesn't really look like a triangle. i'm not exactly an expert in this area (i did take psychology of perception in college), so feel free to prove me wrong.
Re:Ears? (Score:2)
How Hearing Works [howstuffworks.com]
Got to say it (Score:2)
Re:Got to say it (Score:2, Funny)
I used to have a cool sig but people replied to it more than they did my comments.
Tell me about it
Whoa (Score:1)
So, she names the dead ones? Interesting.