sci-man Posted February 12, 2018 Posted February 12, 2018 (edited) I'm not sure if this should go here but here is my question. How does hive mind work I know that it is most often associated with bees but what is it and how does it work? Also could we humans develop something like this to use? And yes I know that I could google this but I want to ask some real people that know stuff and not a wiki article. Edited February 12, 2018 by sci-man
Bender Posted February 12, 2018 Posted February 12, 2018 Give agents, such as individual ants, bees, or robots, a simple set of instructions. A proper set of simple instructions can result in complex, emergent behaviour, which can even seem intelligent. Classic example There is quite some research on swarm robots, which aim to take advantage of such emergent behaviour.
Endy0816 Posted February 12, 2018 Posted February 12, 2018 Helstrom's Hive, is a good fictional take on it for humans. Based on chemicals and specialized workers rather than something like the Borg. Realistically sex determination is different for our species though. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplodiploidy Some things make others more likely.
Area54 Posted February 13, 2018 Posted February 13, 2018 10 hours ago, Bender said: Give agents, such as individual ants, bees, or robots, a simple set of instructions. A proper set of simple instructions can result in complex, emergent behaviour, which can even seem intelligent. I understand there is still significant debate about what exactly intelligence is. (In lay discussions I see many people seem to conflate or confuse it with consciousness.) Given those apparent uncertainties might it be that the behaviour not only seems intelligent, but is intelligent? 9 hours ago, Endy0816 said: Helstrom's Hive, is a good fictional take on it for humans Frank Herbert's book sprang immediately to my mind also.
Bender Posted February 13, 2018 Posted February 13, 2018 14 hours ago, Area54 said: I understand there is still significant debate about what exactly intelligence is. (In lay discussions I see many people seem to conflate or confuse it with consciousness.) Given those apparent uncertainties might it be that the behaviour not only seems intelligent, but is intelligent? Sure. Intelligence is a vague concept.
Endy0816 Posted February 14, 2018 Posted February 14, 2018 (edited) 16 hours ago, Area54 said: Frank Herbert's book sprang immediately to my mind also. Da, he's better known for Dune but I thought the Hive was well done. Shows the wildly different way a hive would function and the almost inevitable conflict we would have with them. Naked mole-rats do form similar colonies so not impossible for mammals though it seems like conditions need to be right. Again the relatedness is skewed. Edited February 14, 2018 by Endy0816
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