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Animal Learning and Intelligence

Uncovering the Risks: New Research on Canine Facilities and Intestinal Diseases in Dogs and Humans

For dogs housed at Texas kennels, age and fecal score are important factors for screening for subclinical Giardia infections.

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Researchers at Texas A&M University have made a significant breakthrough in understanding the factors associated with intestinal diseases caused by Giardia duodenalis and Cryptosporidium in dogs and humans. These pathogens are common causes of sometimes-fatal intestinal diseases worldwide.

For their study, researchers tested fecal samples from 153 clinically normal dogs housed at Texas kennels between March and October 2021. The results showed that dogs were significantly more likely to test positive for Giardia (45%) than Cryptosporidium (7%). No clear link was found between sex or breed and these infections.

However, the study revealed some important findings:

* Kennel-housed dogs 18 months of age or younger had 3.4 times the odds of Giardia infection compared with older dogs.
* Hard stool was associated with a negative test status for Giardia in the stool.

The researchers emphasized that these findings are crucial for choosing which dogs to screen for subclinical Giardia and highlighted the importance of robust testing methods, especially for younger dogs.

This new research provides valuable insights into minimizing the risk of intestinal diseases at canine facilities. As Dr. Loni Taylor noted, “The primary takeaway is that age and fecal score are important factors for choosing which dogs to screen for subclinical Giardia.” By understanding these factors, we can take steps to protect both dogs and humans from these often-deadly diseases.

Animal Learning and Intelligence

Whales Speak Their Minds: Decoding the Secret Language of Bubble Rings

Humpback whales have been observed blowing bubble rings during friendly interactions with humans a behavior never before documented. This surprising display may be more than play; it could represent a sophisticated form of non-verbal communication. Scientists from the SETI Institute and UC Davis believe these interactions offer valuable insights into non-human intelligence, potentially helping refine our methods for detecting extraterrestrial life. Their findings underscore the intelligence, curiosity, and social complexity of whales, making them ideal analogues for developing communication models beyond Earth.

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As we delve into the fascinating world of marine mammals, a team of scientists from the SETI Institute and the University of California at Davis has made a groundbreaking discovery. For the first time, they’ve documented humpback whales producing large bubble rings, akin to a human smoker blowing smoke rings, during friendly interactions with humans. This previously little-studied behavior may represent play or communication.

Humpback whales are already known for using bubbles to corral prey and creating bubble trails and bursts when competing to escort a female whale. These new observations show humpback whales producing bubble rings during friendly encounters with humans. This finding contributes to the WhaleSETI team’s broader goal of studying non-human intelligence to aid in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence.

The study, published in Marine Mammal Science, analyzed 12 bubble ring-production episodes involving 39 rings made by 11 individual whales. According to Dr. Laurance Doyle, SETI Institute scientist and co-author on the paper, “Because of current limitations on technology, an important assumption of the search for extraterrestrial intelligence is that extraterrestrial intelligence and life will be interested in making contact and so target human receivers.” This assumption is certainly supported by the independent evolution of curious behavior in humpback whales.

Dr. Fred Sharpe, co-lead author and UC Davis Affiliate, notes, “Humpback whales live in complex societies, are acoustically diverse, use bubble tools, and assist other species being harassed by predators. Now, akin to a candidate signal, we show they are blowing bubble rings in our direction in an apparent attempt to playfully interact, observe our response, and/or engage in some form of communication.”

The team’s findings have significant implications for the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. By studying intelligent, non-terrestrial (aquatic), nonhuman communication systems, they aim to develop filters that aid in parsing cosmic signals for signs of extraterrestrial life.

Other team members and coauthors of the paper include Dr. Josephine Hubbard, Doug Perrine, Simon Hilbourne, Dr. Joy Reidenberg, and Dr. Brenda McCowan, with specialties in animal intelligences, photography, behavior of humpback whales, whale anatomy, and the use of AI in parsing animal communication.

An earlier paper by the team was published in PeerJ, entitled “Interactive Bioacoustic Playback as a Tool for Detecting and Exploring Nonhuman Intelligence: ‘Conversing’ with an Alaskan Humpback Whale.” The authors would like to acknowledge the Templeton Foundation Diverse Intelligences Program for financial support of this work.

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Animal Learning and Intelligence

The Buzz on Caffeine: How it Affects the Sleeping Brain

Coffee can help you stay awake. But what does caffeine actually do to your brain once you’re asleep? Using AI, a team of researchers has an answer: it affects the brain’s ‘criticality’.

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The article delves into the intricate relationship between caffeine and the sleeping brain, offering fresh insights from a recent study published in Nature Communications Biology. Researchers from Université de Montréal have shed new light on how caffeine can modify sleep patterns and influence the brain’s recovery during the night.

Led by Philipp Thölke, a research trainee at UdeM’s Cognitive and Computational Neuroscience Laboratory (CoCo Lab), the team used AI and electroencephalography (EEG) to study caffeine’s effects on sleep. Their findings reveal that caffeine increases the complexity of brain signals and enhances brain “criticality” during sleep – a state characterized by balanced order and chaos.

Interestingly, this effect is more pronounced in younger adults, particularly during REM sleep, the phase associated with dreaming. The researchers attribute this finding to a higher density of adenosine receptors in young brains, which naturally decrease with age. Adenosine is a molecule that accumulates throughout the day, causing fatigue.

The study’s lead author, Thölke, notes that caffeine stimulates the brain and pushes it into a state of criticality, where it is more awake, alert, and reactive. However, this state can interfere with rest at night, preventing the brain from relaxing or recovering properly.

The researchers used EEG to record the nocturnal brain activity of 40 healthy adults on two separate nights: one when they consumed caffeine capsules three hours before bedtime and another when they took a placebo at the same time. They applied advanced statistical analysis and artificial intelligence to identify subtle changes in neuronal activity, revealing that caffeine increased the complexity of brain signals during sleep.

The team also discovered striking changes in the brain’s electrical rhythms during sleep: caffeine attenuated slower oscillations such as theta and alpha waves – generally associated with deep, restorative sleep – and stimulated beta wave activity, which is more common during wakefulness and mental engagement.

These findings suggest that even during sleep, the brain remains in a more activated, less restorative state under the influence of caffeine. This change in the brain’s rhythmic activity may help explain why caffeine affects the efficiency with which the brain recovers during the night, with potential consequences for memory processing.

The study’s implications are significant, particularly given the widespread use of caffeine as a daily remedy for fatigue. The researchers stress the importance of understanding its complex effects on brain activity across different age groups and health conditions. They add that further research is needed to clarify how these neural changes affect cognitive health and daily functioning, potentially guiding personalized recommendations for caffeine intake.

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Animal Learning and Intelligence

The Brainy Advantage: How Asian Elephants Outshine Their African Relatives

African elephants are the largest land animals on earth and significantly larger than their relatives in Asia, from which they are separated by millions of years of evolution. Nevertheless, Asian elephants have a 20 percent heavier brain, as scientists were able to demonstrate. They also showed that elephant brains triple in weight after birth. These results provide potential explanations for behavioral differences between African and Asian elephants as well as for the pachyderms’ long youth, during which they gain enormous experience and learn social skills.

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The article delves into the fascinating world of elephant brains, highlighting the distinct differences between their Asian and African counterparts. Despite being separated by millions of years of evolution, research has revealed that Asian elephants possess a 20% heavier brain than their larger African relatives. This groundbreaking finding, published in the scientific journal “PNAS Nexus,” sheds light on potential explanations for behavioral differences between the two species, as well as their remarkable youth and long lifespan.

Elephants are renowned for their exceptional social and intelligent nature, yet surprisingly little is known about their brains. A team of international researchers, led by Malav Shah and Michael Brecht from Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, has analyzed the weight and structure of Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) and African elephant (Loxodonta africana) brains based on dissections of wild and zoo animals, as well as literature data and MRI scans. Their findings show that adult female Asian elephants have significantly heavier brains, weighing an average of 5,300 grams, compared to their African counterparts, which weigh around 4,400 grams.

Moreover, the cerebellum is proportionally heavier in African elephants (22% of total brain weight) than in Asian elephants (19%). The researchers attribute this difference to the more complex motor function of the trunk in African elephants, which can perform diverse movements with their two trunk fingers. This is also reflected in a higher number of neurons in the trunk’s control center in the brain.

The study further reveals that elephant brains grow almost as much as human brains after birth, tripling in weight by adulthood. This remarkable postnatal brain growth exceeds that of all primates, except humans, where the brain at birth weighs only around a fifth of its final weight. The researchers emphasize that this finding is significant for understanding motor skills and social behavior in elephants.

The study’s authors highlight the challenges involved in acquiring elephant brains for research, as extracting them from skulls is a complex veterinary procedure rarely performed. Nevertheless, they were able to analyze 19 brains extracted from deceased zoo animals or wild elephants, including those obtained from dissections of wild elephants that had died. The inclusion of data from an earlier study by another research team further strengthened their analysis.

The implications of these findings are profound, suggesting that the difference in brain weight could explain important behavioral differences between Asian and African elephants. For instance, while both species interact with humans differently, Asian elephants have been partially domesticated over thousands of years and are used as work animals in various cultures and regions. In contrast, there are only a few cases where domestication was even partially successful for African elephants.

The study’s authors conclude that social factors and learning processes could explain the strong brain growth after birth, as elephants live in complex social structures and have an outstanding memory. The experience and accumulated knowledge of adult elephants, especially matriarchs, is central to group behavior in elephants and young animals are closely cared for over a long period of childhood and adolescence.

Ultimately, this research highlights the need for further investigation into the brains of Asian and African elephants and their significance for motor skills and social behavior. As the authors note, there are many unanswered questions in researching these fascinating, intelligent animals and their “control centers.”

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