Fish can't recognise faces if they’re upside down – just like us 
US Source: new scientist 8/5/2017
Fish can't recognise faces if they’re upside down – just like us
Species: Japanese rice fish or the medaka (Oryzias latipes)

Habitat: Rice paddies, marshes, ponds and slow-moving streams in East Asia

Are you good with faces? So is the Japanese rice fish – at least, it is if the faces are the right way up. Just like humans, the tiny fish has no problem recognising faces orientated the usual way, but, again like us, it struggles when they are inverted. The finding indicates that the fish may have developed a unique brain pathway for face recognition, just as humans have.
 

We have no problem identifying most objects in our environment – say, a chair – no matter what way up they are. But faces are different. It is relatively easy for us to spot the differences between two faces, even if they are physically similar, if we see them in photographs the right way up. But if the images are upside down, telling them apart gets a bit tricky.

“This is because we have a specific brain area for processing faces, and when the face is upside down, we process the image through object processing pathways, and not the face-processing pathways any more,” says Mu-Yun Wang at the University of Tokyo, Japan.

Until now, this face-inversion effect was considered exclusive to mammals as it has only been observed in primates and sheep.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
2951Massive 832-pound bluefin tuna caught off Florida coastFox News2022-04-29US
2952Texas man catches 9.5-foot tiger shark with the help of a droneFox News2022-05-04US
2953Angler reels in massive 'fish of a lifetime,' sets new state recordFox News2022-04-12US
2954Российские рыбаки продолжают стабильно вести промысел: добыто более 1,7 млн тонн водных биоресурсовkorabel2022-05-06RU
2955Власти Камчатки огласили разрешенный объем вылова лососей в 2022 годуkorabel2022-04-29RU
2956Autonomous robotic rover helps scientists with long-term monitoring of deep-sea carbon cycle and climate changembari2021-11-03US
2957New footage shows bizarre deep-sea fish that sees through its foreheadlivescience2021-12-13US
2958Monitoring river health using a robotic water samplerMBARI2020-09-21US
2959Elusive bronze-scaled ‘dragon’ of the deep caught on video off California coastLive Science2022-05-05US
2960Another big Maritime fishery quota cut loomingCBC News2022-05-06CA
2961Ontario's feral goldfish population is exploding and climate change may be to blameCBC News2022-05-02CA
2962Twelwe Pound Burbot Breaks New Hampshire State Recordfishncanada2022-02-18CA
296351-Pound Muskie Shatters State Recordfishncanada2022-03-15US
2964Lack of fairness prompts Federal Court to set aside B.C. fish farm phaseoutglobalnews2022-04-27CA
296515 Types of Koi for Your PondHappyDIYHome2022-03-27NZ
2966Блогер создал аквариум на колесах, чтобы выгуливать любимых золотых рыбridus2022-05-04TW
2967She defied the odds to lead the first all-women fishing cooperativecnn2022-04-22AG
2968B.C. conservation group moves thousands of salmoncbc2022-04-20CA
2969State agency warns dog owners to beware of salmon poisoning diseaseTHE PRESS DEMOCRAT2022-04-19US
2970Nine Taiwanese indicted for deep-sea fishing boat abusefocustaiwan2022-04-20TW
2971Is plastic on the menu of Antarctic fish?swissinfo2022-04-21CH
2972In Cambodia, planting trees can save the fishmastercard2022-04-21KH
2973Man spent 47 minutes reeling in rare fish — then released it, Missouri officials saymiamiherald2022-04-21US
2974Young Tanzanians use organic waste to produce fish feedchina2022-04-22CH
2975Exotic saltwater fish tank luring visitors to Middletown’s City Hall for a glimpse of ocean lifesheltonherald2022-04-22US

215 216 217 118 of [218 - pages.]