Study shows caterpillars match ant rhythms with precise vibrations, strengthening their chances of being protected inside colonies.
If you were small enough to fit inside an ant nest, you would hear it as much as you would see it. The walls shiver with tiny ...
Research from the University of Warwick has revealed that butterfly caterpillars use sophisticated rhythmic signals to communicate with ants, helping them gain protection, food, and access to ant ...
An international research team found that butterfly caterpillars use sophisticated rhythmic signals to communicate with ants. The post New research finds caterpillars ‘drum’ to communicate with ants ...
Parents have been singing lullabies to their children for thousands of years, but emerging research suggests that music does far more than simply calm a restless infant. Dutch scientists have ...
Research from the University of Warwick has revealed that butterfly caterpillars use sophisticated rhythmic signals to communicate with ants, helping ...
Research from the University of Warwick has revealed that butterfly caterpillars use sophisticated rhythmic signals to communicate with ants, helping ...
Black Violin’s ability to genre-hop was most apparent when they played canonical works like Vivaldi’s “Spring” and Bach’s “Concerto No. 3.” Marcus and Baptiste would start off reverently playing the ...
New research shows that play sessions with music improved babies' brain processing of both music and new speech sounds. Rock your baby in sync with music and you may wonder how the experience affects ...
Babies are born with the ability to predict rhythm, according to a study published February 5 in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by Roberta Bianco from the Italian Institute of Technology, and ...
A little-known American lawsuit could end up reshaping popular music. A US federal court is preparing to rule on a landmark copyright dispute. At its centre is an interesting question: can a short ...
For more than a century, psychologists thought that the infant experience was, as the psychologist and philosopher William James famously put it, a “blooming, buzzing confusion.” But new research ...