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You’ve heard of flying fish, well how about driving fish?

Source: Facebook/Ben-Gurain University of the Negev

Researchers at Israel’s Ben-Gurian University have found goldfish are capable of navigating a specially adapted vehicle on land after training them to drive — which (believe it or not) didn’t take long!

Israeli Scientists teach goldfish to drive on land

A study by an interdisciplinary researchers team at Ben-Gurian University, Israel, discovered a goldfish’s navigational ability supersedes its watery environs in an experiment to explore animal behaviour. 

Researchers designed a set of wheels under a goldfish tank with a camera system to record and translate the fish’s movements into forward and back and side to side directions to the wheels. After a few days of training, the fish navigated to the target. Moreover, they were able to do so even if they were interrupted in the middle by hitting a wall, and false targets placed by the researchers did not fool them. (Video below) Their findings were published last month in the peer-reviewed journal Behavioural Brain Research.

After a few days of training, the fish navigated to the target. Moreover, they were able to do so even if they were interrupted in the middle by hitting a wall and they were not fooled by false targets placed by the researchers.
The researchers tested whether the fish was really navigating by placing a clearly visible target on the wall opposite the tank. After a few days of training, the fish navigated to the target. Moreover, they were able to do so even if they were interrupted in the middle by hitting a wall and they were not fooled by false targets placed by the researchers. Source: Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

Can a Goldfish Drive a Car on Land?

A goldfish has successfully driven a robotic car in new research from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. While it almost sounds like a Dr. Seuss book, it was an actual experiment to explore animal behaviour.  

Are animals’ innate navigational abilities universal or are they restricted to their home environments? Taking the premise to the extreme, the researchers designed a set of wheels under a goldfish tank with a camera system to record and translate the fish’s movements into forward and back and side to side directions to the wheels. By doing so, they discovered that a goldfish’s navigational ability supersedes its watery environs. Their findings were published last month in the peer-reviewed journal Behavioural Brain Research. 

The researchers tested whether the fish was really navigating by placing a clearly visible target on the wall opposite the tank. After a few days of training, the fish navigated to the target. Moreover, they were able to do so even if they were interrupted in the middle by hitting a wall and they were not fooled by false targets placed by the researchers. 

The study led the researchers to two conclusions. "The study hints that navigational ability is universal rather than specific to the environment. Second, it shows that goldfish have the cognitive ability to learn a complex task in an environment completely unlike the one they evolved in. As anyone who has tried to learn how to ride a bike or to drive a car knows, it is challenging at first," says Shachar Givon, a Ph.D. student in the Life Sciences Department in the Faculty of Natural Sciences. 

The study was conducted by Givon, Matan Samina, an MSc student in the Biomedical Engineering Department in the Faculty of Engineering Sciences, Prof. Ohad Ben Shahar of the Computer Sciences Department and head of the School of Brain Sciences and Cognition, and Prof. Ronen Segev of the Life Sciences & Biomedical Engineering Departments. 

The research was supported by The Israel Science Foundation – First Program (grant no. 555/19), the Israel Science Foundation (grant no. 211/15), a Human Frontiers Science Foundation grant RGP0016/2019, The Lynne and William Frankel Center for Computer Science, and the Helmsley Charitable Trust through the Agricultural, Biological and Cognitive Robotics Initiative of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. 

Source: Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

Ben-Gurion University helping Dory find her way home. A study of an interdisciplinary researchers team led by Prof. Ohad Ben-Shahar, Prof. Ronen Segev, Matan Samina, and Shachar Givon discovered a goldfish's navigational ability supersedes its watery environs in an experiment to explore animal behaviour. Source: Facebook/Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
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