They may recognise your face

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grizzly

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Was reading a new book last night, and it mentioned that bees have been found to recognise a face for up to 2 days.

Some of you may already know it, but i just Googled it as i was curious and you can see below.

beeLookingFace2.jpg

Honeybees may look pretty much all alike to us. But it seems we may not look all alike to them. A study has found that they can learn to recognize human faces in photos, and remember them for at least two days.


Image above: A honeybee inspects a photograph of a face in preparation for a landing. (Courtesy the Journal of Experimental Biology)
The findings toss new uncertainty into a long-studied question that some scientists considered largely settled, the researchers say: how humans themselves recognize faces.
The results also may help lead to better face-recognition software, developed through study of the insect brain, the scientists added.
Many researchers traditionally believed facial recognition required a large brain, and possibly a specialized area of that organ dedicated to processing face information. The bee finding casts doubt on that, said Adrian G. Dyer, the lead researcher in the study.
He recalls that when he made the discovery, it startled him so much that he called out to a colleague, telling her to come quickly because “no one’s going to believe it—and bring a camera!”
Dyer said that to his knowledge, the finding is the first time an invertebrate has shown ability to recognize faces of other species. But not all bees were up to the task: some flunked it, he said, although this seemed due more to a failure to grasp how the experiment worked than to poor facial recognition specifically.
In any cases, some humans also can’t recognize faces, Dyer noted; the condition is called prosopagnosia.
In the bee study, reported in the Dec. 15 issue of the Journal of Experimental Biology, Dyer and two colleagues presented honeybees with photos of human faces taken from a standard human psychology test. The photos had similar lighting, background colors and sizes and included only the face and neck to avoid having the insects make judgments based on the clothing. In some cases, the people in the pictures themselves looked similar.
The researchers, with Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany, tried to train the bees to realize that a photo of one man had a drop of a sugary liquid next to it. Different photos came with a drop of bitter liquid instead.
A few bees apparently failed to realize that they should pay attention to the photos at all. But five bees learned to fly toward the photo horizontally in such a way that they could get a good look at it, Dyer reported. In fact, these bees tended to hover a few centimeters in front of the image for a while before deciding where to land.
 
I think they recognise eyes because that's what they go for first.
 
I think they can recognize my brown furry socks !!
 
i knew it, one of my hives is a follower :willy_nilly: , they will always follow me, even if i have another beek with me, they will always follow me :toetap05:

Ive either pulled or ive got to shower more often bee-smillie :gnorsi:

TB
 
I think they can recognize my brown furry socks !!

is it everyone or only me, they always go for my socks just above the ankles, even if wearing wellies they go down inside

they re act to Co2 in breath so, could it be smell...no adverse commnets please, i do wash them
 
Pete, I seem to think that they recognise green, yellow, blue and white.

Otherwise those beeks that have been painting the front of their hives in those different primary colours, to minimise drifting - just had spare paint to hand :)
 
I am going to paint the enterances on the shed for that reason. But iam sure that flowers are ultra violot rather than the coulours we see, will have to dig out the hedgerow library

most, if not all flowers reflect UV making them glow making them attractive to insects...
I believe bees can only see combinations of UV, Blue and Green (as opposed to Blue, Green and Red for people without color vision deficiency)
 

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