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posted by n1 on Saturday December 29 2018, @09:33AM   Printer-friendly
from the skyrim-for-fish dept.

Submitted via IRC for Fnord666

Researchers at the New Jersey Institute of Technology, while testing the "station keeping" functions of the glass knifefish, have created an augmented reality system that tricks the animal's electric sensing organs in real time. The fish keeps itself hidden by moving inside of its various holes/homes and the researchers wanted to understand what kind of autonomous sensing functions it used to keep itself safe.

Source: TechCrunch

To investigate, the researchers placed weakly electric fish inside an experimental tank with an artificial refuge enclosure, capable of automatically shuttling back and forth based on real time video tracking of the fish's movement. The team studied how the fish's behavior and movement in the refuge would be altered in two categories of experiments: "closed loop" experiments, whereby the fish's movement is synced to the shuttle motion of the refuge; and "open loop" experiments, whereby motion of the refuge is "replayed" to the fish as if from a tape recorder. Notably, the researchers observed that the fish swam the farthest to gain sensory information during closed loop experiments when the augmented reality system's positive "feedback gain" was turned up — or whenever the refuge position was made to mirror the movement of the fish.

[...] "It turns out the fish behave differently when the stimulus is controlled by the individual versus when the stimulus is played back to them," added Fortune. "This experiment demonstrates that the phenomenon that we are observing is due to feedback the fish receives from its own movement. Essentially, the animal seems to know that it is controlling the sensory world around it."

Source: NJIT


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  • (Score: 2) by Hartree on Saturday December 29 2018, @06:02PM

    by Hartree (195) on Saturday December 29 2018, @06:02PM (#779761)

    It's a fish that uses small amounts of electricity that it generates to sense the world around it. Here's a website that describes it better (It's the lab of Mark Nelson, who studies them. He has an aquarium tank on display with the fish and sensors that let you hear the electric signal. He also teaches an excellent intro neuroscience class that I got to sit in on.)

    http://nelson.beckman.illinois.edu/electric_fish.html [illinois.edu]

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