TED Talksのインスタグラム(ted) - 10月18日 06時03分
Watch closely. Both of these plants — the tall, leafy Mimosa pudica and the Venus flytrap — have receptors that cause them to move when touched. With equipment typically used to study the human brain, neuroscientist and @tedfellow Greg Gage sends the electric firings from one plant and to the other, causing the mimosa to droop after he touches the Venus flytrap. “Do plants have brains? No. They don’t get depressed. They don’t have self-actualization problems,” says Greg. “But what they do have is something that's very similar to us, which is the ability to communicate using electricity.” To learn more, watch Greg’s #TEDTalk at go.ted.com/plantdemo
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