Sunday, August 17, 2014
Saturday, July 26, 2014
Monday, June 9, 2014
I Heart Inkblot Speed Painting by: Tamera Newton
Labels:
I HEART INKBLOT,
QUEEN OF FABLES,
TAMERA NEWTON,
VIDEO,
Visionary art,
VISUALS
Saturday, May 24, 2014
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Saturday, April 12, 2014
Cosmic creativity -- how art evolves consciousness: Alex Grey at TEDxMau...
Labels:
VIDEO,
Visionary art
Friday, March 21, 2014
You Can Open Your Third Eye With Magnet - To Not Only See Things Within This Dimension But Also Beyond As Well - MessageToEagle.com
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Spectacular Multi-Color Psychedelic Salt Caves - An Astonishing Natural Masterpiece - MessageToEagle.com
Monday, January 20, 2014
MIMOSA REVEALS PLANTS CAN THINK AND REMEMBER
Mimosa Reveals Plants Can Think And Remember - MessageToEagle.com
MessageToEagle.com - In our article
"Amazing Phenomenon Of Singing Plants" we described how plants can sing and even make music.
World of plants is both amazing and surprising because they possess many other impressive and very sophisticated abilities to learn and communicate, sense danger and know how to successfully avoid predators.
Like we humans, plants can feel, see, smell and remember, according to Daniel Chamovitz, director of the Manna Center for Plant Biosciences at Tel Aviv University who unveils the surprising world of plants
Mimosa pudica L. - Sensitive Plant
Even noise can have ripple effects on plants.
Plants are able to 'talk' using sound
says Dr Monica Gagliano an Australian Research Council research fellow at The
University of Western Australia's Centre for Evolutionary Biology. Now, Dr Gagliano,, delivers solid evidence to support her theories. Actually plants can 'learn' and it's definitely not science fiction.
Her new article - written with Associate Professor Michael Renton and Dr Martial Depczynski from UWA's School of Plant Biology and Oceans Institute respectively, and Professor Stefano Mancuso at the University of Florence in Italy - is titled "Experience teaches plants to learn faster and forget slower in environments where it matters". Dr Gagliano and her team show that Mimosa pudica plants can learn and remember just as well as it would be expected of animals, but of course, they do it all without a brain.
Researchers trained Mimosa plants' short- and long-term memories under both high and low-light environments by repeatedly dropping water on them using a custom-designed apparatus (Mimosa folds its leaves in response to the drop). They show how Mimosa plants stopped closing their leaves when they learnt that the repeated disturbance had no real
damaging consequence. Mimosa plants were able to acquire the learnt behaviour in a matter of seconds and as in animals, learning was faster in less favourable environment (i.e. low light).
Sensitive plant - Mimosa pudica in green nature or in the garden.
Most remarkably, these plants were able to remember what had been
learned for several weeks, even after environmental conditions had
changed. Plants may lack brains and neural tissues but they do possess a
sophisticated calcium-based signally network in their cells similar to
animals' memory processes, they write.
MessageToEagle.com - In our article
"Amazing Phenomenon Of Singing Plants" we described how plants can sing and even make music.
World of plants is both amazing and surprising because they possess many other impressive and very sophisticated abilities to learn and communicate, sense danger and know how to successfully avoid predators.
Like we humans, plants can feel, see, smell and remember, according to Daniel Chamovitz, director of the Manna Center for Plant Biosciences at Tel Aviv University who unveils the surprising world of plants
Mimosa pudica L. - Sensitive Plant
Even noise can have ripple effects on plants.
Plants are able to 'talk' using sound
says Dr Monica Gagliano an Australian Research Council research fellow at The
University of Western Australia's Centre for Evolutionary Biology. Now, Dr Gagliano,, delivers solid evidence to support her theories. Actually plants can 'learn' and it's definitely not science fiction.
Her new article - written with Associate Professor Michael Renton and Dr Martial Depczynski from UWA's School of Plant Biology and Oceans Institute respectively, and Professor Stefano Mancuso at the University of Florence in Italy - is titled "Experience teaches plants to learn faster and forget slower in environments where it matters". Dr Gagliano and her team show that Mimosa pudica plants can learn and remember just as well as it would be expected of animals, but of course, they do it all without a brain.
Researchers trained Mimosa plants' short- and long-term memories under both high and low-light environments by repeatedly dropping water on them using a custom-designed apparatus (Mimosa folds its leaves in response to the drop). They show how Mimosa plants stopped closing their leaves when they learnt that the repeated disturbance had no real
damaging consequence. Mimosa plants were able to acquire the learnt behaviour in a matter of seconds and as in animals, learning was faster in less favourable environment (i.e. low light).
Labels:
mimosa hostilis
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