The Secret Life of Bees
The world's leading expert on bee behavior discovers the secrets of decision-making in a swarm
- By Carl Zimmer
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
A swarm and a brain both make decisions. Our brains have to make quick judgments about a flood of neural signals from our eyes, for example, figuring out what we’re seeing and deciding how to respond.
Both swarms and brains make their decisions democratically. Despite her royal title, a honeybee queen does not make decisions for the hive. The hive makes decisions for her. In our brain, no single neuron takes in all the information from our senses and makes a decision. Millions make a collective choice.
“Bees are to hives as neurons are to brains,” says Jeffrey Schall, a neuroscientist at Vanderbilt University. Neurons use some of the same tricks honeybees use to come to decisions. A single visual neuron is like a single scout. It reports about a tiny patch of what we see, just as a scout dances for a single site. Different neurons may give us conflicting ideas about what we’re actually seeing, but we have to quickly choose between the alternatives. That red blob seen from the corner of your eye may be a stop sign, or it may be a car barreling down the street.
To make the right choice, our neurons hold a competition, and different coalitions recruit more neurons to their interpretation of reality, much as scouts recruit more bees.
Our brains need a way to avoid stalemates. Like the decaying dances of honeybees, a coalition starts to get weaker if it doesn’t get a continual supply of signals from the eyes. As a result, it doesn’t get locked early into the wrong choice. Just as honeybees use a quorum, our brain waits until one coalition hits a threshold and then makes a decision.
Seeley thinks that this convergence between bees and brains can teach people a lot about how to make decisions in groups. “Living in groups, there’s a wisdom to finding a way for members to make better decisions collectively than as individuals,” he said.
Recently Seeley was talking at the Naval War College. He explained the radical differences in how swarms and captain-dominated ships make decisions. “They realize that information is very distributed across the ship,” Seeley said. “Does it make sense to have power so concentrated? Sometimes you need a fast decision, but there’s a trade-off between fast versus accurate.”
In his experience, Seeley says, New England town hall meetings are the closest human grouping to honeybee swarms. “There are some differences, but there are also some fundamental similarities,” he said. Like scouts, individual citizens are allowed to share different ideas with the entire meeting. Other citizens can judge for themselves the merit of their ideas, and they can speak up themselves. “When it’s working properly, good ideas rise up and bad ones sink down,” says Seeley.
Groups work well, he argues, if the power of leaders is minimized. A group of people can propose many different ideas—the more the better, in fact. But those ideas will only lead to a good decision if listeners take the time to judge their merits for themselves, just as scouts go to check out potential homes for themselves.
Groups also do well if they’re flexible, ensuring that good ideas don’t lose out simply because they come late in the discussion. And rather than try to debate an issue until everyone in a group agrees, Seeley advises using a honeybee-style quorum. Otherwise the debate will drag on.
One of the strengths of honeybees is that they share the same goal: finding a new home. People who come together in a democracy, however, may have competing interests. Seeley advises that people should be made to feel that they are part of the decision-making group, so that their debates don’t become about destroying the enemy, but about finding a solution for everyone. “That sense of belonging can be nurtured,” Seeley said. The more we fashion our democracies after honeybees, Seeley argues, the better off we’ll be.
Carl Zimmer’s latest book is Science Ink: Tattoos of the Science Obsessed.
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Comments (21)
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Hello, I have found the answer and solution to help honeybees deal with the parasitic mite varroa and stop honeybees dying worldwide needlessly, using a bio-dynamic natural phenomenon, without using chemicals or man-made product. It is a world exclusive! I have been using this hypothesis for many years without any honeybee colonies dying out. This makes all my honeybees, regardless of specie, varroa resistant. During my research I have found Chemical companies, in the UK, have a stranglehold on beekeeping associations and honeybee science. So if a natural answer was found, like mine, it would never or could not be accepted. I have kept honeybees for 30 years, up to 300 colonies, always looking outside the box always questioning, why? Please remember I am not a Professional Scientist, I am just a passionate beekeeper that has used observation, time, experimentation and research, and hence, why it has taken so long At the beginning, for 2 years, I treated with these approved chemicals but each year I lost 30% of my queens, not the workers, just the queens, queen cells were made but as this was out of season, there were few or no drones for mating, so it could not be supercedure. I had no choice; I immediately stopped all treatment of chemicals and sugar. My book was the only way I could be heard, that is now selling around the world, “An HOLISTIC Way in Saving the Honeybee”. Available through Northern Bee Books www.groovycart.co.uk/beebooks or Amazon. I am at present re-writing the above due to the original book was not proof-read or edited by the publisher, a little naive on my part, being written 5 years ago, 2007, and published January 2011. The new E-book, with further information, will be called “How to create a Varroa Resistant Honeybee”. Just ask yourself. Why are my bees not dying? Why is varroa no longer a problem in my hives? Why do my honeybees supercede rather than swarm?
Posted by John Harding on May 17,2012 | 07:22 AM
What a wonderful artical done by Carl Zimmer. Thomas Seeley, sir, hat's off to you and your efforts in the study of this remarkable creture we share this planet with.
While only a beekeeper for a few years I have to share this story: While performing a trap out on a hive in a house, I had sent up my box next to the trap out cone with the box containing brood and honey. While explaining to the home owner the process of how and why what was going to happen, a large swarm flew accross the field, hovered around the house then went into my hive box. This reinforces my belief that you can't make bees' do anything and they do as they will. Happy Beekeeping!
Posted by Tom Cannon on March 24,2012 | 03:17 PM
I'm 85, worked bees sense 14. The only time i ever saw virgin queens lead a swarm was secondary swarms that sometimes leave when the virgin goes out on a maiting flight. Infact that is a comman thing among the Africanized bees and they sometimes will exaust a colony to the poing of distruction with the production of fist size swarms following virgin queens. A wonderful artical except for the distruction of a colony by poison. it was not necessary, the bees could have been removes as the tree was opened up.
Posted by Bob Sullivan on March 19,2012 | 08:17 AM
I was shocked to read in the article, "Hive Mind" that, for Seely's PhD at Harvard, he poured cyanide into hives to kill the honeybees inside. Deplorable especially with the death of honeybees in our country. No PhD is worth this type of cruelty.
Posted by Charlotte M. Johnson on March 15,2012 | 07:20 PM
In the March, 2012 issue Carl Zimmer stated in his article that when bees swarm they take the new queen with them. I have only been a beekeeper for just over five years, but I have always understood that the old queen leaves the hive with the swarm. Please ask Mr. Zimmer on what does he base his information. In all the books I have read and bee schools I have attended, it has always been understood that the old queen leaves the hive.
I would be very interested in hearing his comments. I am all about learning as much as I can about my honey bees. They are such a joy in my life.
Bee Blessed,
Rebecca Collier
Shelbyville, Kentucky
Posted by Rebecca Collier on March 9,2012 | 01:05 PM
Who knew the Borg have come to as honey bees. Clearly " resistance (to a hive move) is futile."
Posted by Mr. Steve Restaino DO on March 8,2012 | 01:54 PM
the artical was very enighting i have been keeping bees for 50+ years and the study of bees has always been perplexing swarm study such as has been done by this gentelman is very rewarding thank you for printing.
Posted by wesley l case on March 6,2012 | 02:11 PM
Wondeful article, thank you.
It appears that the scout bees also 'take a break' from the decision on where to move to when they fly back and forth from the new home to the existing hive, during which time another scout may find a better hive and start convincing others to check it out. I wonder if this break, it could be a few minutes or much longer, gives the rest of the swarm time to consider other options, instead of being bombarded with the same signal 'my new home is better' from the scout.
The application of this to meeting, business and politics is fascinating. Don't we all have the same interests when we meet? Either to pick a new president, build a new feature on a project?
And that scouts independently verify the quality of the new home, I suppose this is what our media is meant to do...
I like the comment about honesty in bees.
Posted by Yari on February 29,2012 | 06:42 AM
Perhaps New Englanders are a special breed, but I suspect a bit of rosy glass is distorting the view of those town meetings. Human democracy is a wonderful thing but it will never match the efficiency of bees. The bees (and neurons) are very closely related and so all have the same internal algorithm for relating strength and persistence of expression to value of proposition - and also, since none of the workers are fertile, there is no possible competitive advantage to having ones own "idea" chosen. But perhaps there is a useful lesson for us. If we want to minimize head-butting then we should strive for a highly egalitarian society with minimal fertility for decision makers.
Posted by Alan Cooper on February 28,2012 | 04:55 PM
Dr. Seeley is indeed a wonderful speaker, and I saw he will speak on a new book, Learning from Insects: How our World is Shaped by Bees, Ants and other Insects, at the Harvard Museum of Natural History in Cambridge, MA on April 3, 2012. Free and open to the public.
Posted by Blue Magruder on February 28,2012 | 12:43 PM
This article is wonderful. Dr. Seeley was the keynote speaker at the SUNY Geneseo student symposium day last spring. His presentation was fascinating and he kept the audience engaged the entire time. His work is fascinating.
Posted by Patty Hamilton-Rodgers on February 28,2012 | 10:25 AM
My husband and I were taken aback by the cyanide story as well. We decided that he had no other way to study the bees as their location is pretty secure from inspection.
As to the Yeats poem: what a beauty. Thanks for sharing that in the article!
Will be passing this article along to fellow beekeepers.
Posted by Becca on February 27,2012 | 09:30 AM
Ideas regarding humans' superiority to the rest of creation (re KENNY) intrigue me. I wonder if people mistake superiority for responsibility. It seems humans are the only animal able to destroy so much of creation. It some fashion, though in a rather narrow way, we carry more power but that also means we need to be more responsible in how we live and us that power. To carry more power, have a greater and differently defined responsibility, would not necessarily mean superiority but perhaps it might mean a greater call to serving creation versus exploiting and dominating it (typical abuses of power). I would like to see us define our place as a greater responsibility to serving, not as a function of superiority but as function of privilege, the privilege to care and treasure and protect creation.
Posted by Wes McIntyre on February 25,2012 | 06:01 PM
Read "Honeybee Democracy" to find the answers.
He's doing research because he loves bees and knows their importance.
Posted by Christine Castro on February 25,2012 | 02:36 PM
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