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Related: About this forumBlack-Capped Chickadees Are Masters of Memory--and Scientists Are Finding Out Why
Black-Capped Chickadees Are Masters of Memoryand Scientists Are Finding Out Why
The small birds use brain barcodes to remember where they stash food, according to new research
Sarah Kuta
Daily Correspondent
April 1, 2024
Black-capped chickadees' ability to remember where they've stashed food helps them survive barren winters. Pexel
Every fall, black-capped chickadees cache thousands of seeds, insects and other snacks to help them survive North Americas harsh winters. But how do these petite birdsnamed for their distinctive dee-dee-dee soundsremember where theyve stashed all this food?
Chickadees brains create barcode-like memories each time they deposit food, according to new research published last week in the journal Cell. The findings could offer new insights into how humans and other mammals create and store memories, the researchers report.
When you form a memory of a specific event, your brain may generate a random label which it uses to store information associated with that event, in a way that is analogous to the way a store records information associated with each product to be retrieved when the label is scanned, says study co-author Selmaan Chettih, a neuroscientist at Columbia University, to the Guardians Nicola Davis.
Researchers have long known about the black-capped chickadees impressive memory. But until now, they didnt understand what was happening inside the birds brains that enabled their food-cataloguing feats.
More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/black-capped-chickadees-are-masters-of-memory-and-scientists-are-finding-out-why-180984064/
OAITW r.2.0
(28,361 posts)When I take an extended walk in the woods, a chickadee always seems to follow me. They are fearless. I've had chicks light on the feeders when I am refilling them.
On edit: I don't get the energy equation. A freakin little bird flies in to the feeder, takes one seed, then travels back the 300 yards that it just flew in from.
Diamond_Dog
(34,622 posts)Bayard
(24,145 posts)We get many of them in the crowd on our feeders.