Maybe the article meant that the enhanced flies were shunned by the normal 
flies and thus lacked a social support system and died a miserable, lonely 
fly-death. Which could mean that the normal flies were really smarter anyway, 
couldn't it? Maybe the normal flies possessed more fluid intelligence than the 
enhanced ones and the enhanced ones were just better test-takers. Maybe the 
normals had more street smarts.  

:)

Carol




-----Original Message-----
From: Christopher D. Green [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 6/4/2008 10:17 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] Stupid flies live longer: study - Yahoo! News
 
According to 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080604/sc_afp/switzerlandscienceanimal , a 
group of flies "had its intelligence boosted by Pavlovian methods, such 
as associating smell and taste with particular food or experiences. Over 
30 to 40 generations, these methods led to flies which clearly learned 
better and remembered things for longer."

I'm guessing that this is wrong (unless they have made a cataclysmic 
Lamarckian breakthrough). I presume that they used Pavlovian 
conditioning as a way to distinguish "bright" from "dull" flies, and 
then selectively bred the "bright" ones. In any case, th article then 
goes on to say that "the flies left in their natural state lived longer 
on average than their "cleverer" counterparts, with a lifespan of 80-85 
days rather than the normal 50-60."

This makes it sounds like the "natural" flies lived longer than 
"normal," which also can't be right. I assume that the "enhanced" flies 
lived not as long as normal. In any case, there is almost no general 
conclusion that can be drawn from this about the relationship between 
intelligence and longevity from this unless we know what systems were 
affected by the artificial selection. Obviously, many animals have been 
*naturally* selected for intelligence over the eons, without markedly 
shortening their lifespan. This case is more like that of dogs that are 
bred for a particular "look" and, in the process, are coincidentally 
selected for life-threatening weakness in their organ systems as well.  
The published speculation that "the increase in neural activity weakens 
the fly's life-support systems," doesn't make much sense.

 The journalistic reporting is probably worse than the original study. 
You may wish to use it in class (either in cognition, in 
evolutionary/comparative psych, or in critical thinking).

Regards,
Chris Green
York U.
Toronto

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