If you are trying to predict a magpie's next move, just look into
its eyes. A new study found that when these birds view a potential
predator, they use either their left or right eye, depending on whether
they intend to run away or move closer. These findings reveal clues
about how the brain segregates information between its hemispheres.

Neuroscientist Lesley Rogers and her colleagues at the University of New
England in Australia observed will Australian magpies (Gymnorhina
tibicen) in the presence of a stuffed monitor lizard. Rogers found that
before fleeing, birds would fixate on the "predator" with their
left eye – which sends nearly all its input to the right side of the
brain. But if they were about to approach the lizard for further
investigation, they would inspect it with their right eye, thus using
the left hemisphere.

Recent studies in humans suggest that the right hemisphere processes
information that is novel and potentially threatening, whereas the left
hemisphere carries our more methodical analyses. According to Rogers,
the allocation of different function to different hemispheres allows the
brain to function to different hemispheres allow the brain to function
more efficiently. "Historically, this (specialization) was thought
to explain man's higher cognitive abilities," she says, "But
we've shown that even in animals with comparatively simple brains,
it affects everyday behavior in the natural environmental



Happy Learning,



Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>


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