Before that gives anyone the wrong idea, the brains were still in the rats’ heads for the duration of the experiment — they were connected to one another via microwire arrays, rather than simply being scooped out and placed in a desktop tower. From there, they made up something the researchers are calling a ‘Brainet,’ which is described as a network of animal brains exchanging information via brain-to-brain interfaces.
While the science of connecting animal brains together to perform computational tasks is rather difficult to get your head around, the results are easier to make sense of. The rats working in league were said to have “consistently outperformed individual rats.” The researchers demonstrated this through a variety of tasks including the transfer of visual information to the Brainet, the transfer of memories between rats, and collective weather forecasting.
In the last experiment, the rats were stimulated by temperature and barometric pressure data that might indicate precipitation. Together, the rats were able to correctly forecast the weather in about 41 percent of cases — much higher than pure chance, which would result in only 16 percent accuracy.
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