“For us, that’s a big step beyond just casually intuiting that a fly fleeing a visual threat must be ‘afraid,’ based on our anthropomorphic assumptions.It suggests that the flies’ response to the threat is richer and more complicated than a robotic-like avoidance reflex.”
This may be useful to game designers. Can we make a bot that actually feels fear … and if not, how close can we get?
Using fruit flies to study the basic components of emotion, a new Caltech study reports that a fly’s response to a shadowy overhead stimulus might be analogous to a negative emotional state such as fear — a finding that could one day help us understand the neural circuitry involved in human emotion.
[Source: caltech.edu]
Study:
Media Mentions:
Fruit Flies Are Shown to Enter a Fearlike State @ NY Times
Animal emotions: Do fruit flies feel fear? @ CS Monitor
Reference:
Drosophila @ Wikipedia
See Also: