I read an old (mid-1970s) book on neurology and the study of insect and hominid brains. In it, there were reports of a study done on flatworms which suggested that knowledge could be transferred by eating. (!)
The test was something like this: a flatworm would be taught how to run a maze through shock aversion. Eventually the flatworm would know the right path without any wrong turns.
The flatworm was then killed and fed to another flatworm. The second flatworm would then be tested with the same map layout and demonstrated considerably fewer wrong turns than would be expected of a first-time run-through.
I'm well aware that there are lots of factual questions I'm missing here (like whether flatworms leave a distinct trail that others could follow, etc.) but has anybody read anything about this report and whether it's since been discredited or bolstered?
The test was something like this: a flatworm would be taught how to run a maze through shock aversion. Eventually the flatworm would know the right path without any wrong turns.
The flatworm was then killed and fed to another flatworm. The second flatworm would then be tested with the same map layout and demonstrated considerably fewer wrong turns than would be expected of a first-time run-through.
I'm well aware that there are lots of factual questions I'm missing here (like whether flatworms leave a distinct trail that others could follow, etc.) but has anybody read anything about this report and whether it's since been discredited or bolstered?
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