2015年10月21日星期三

See the embodiment of innovation from prawns

I guess that you all have heard about the shocking news of super expensive prawns from Qingdao of China recently. The huge prawns bill sparks outrage online in China. Humans should pay for what they have eaten. But do you know what hungry prawns do to get their food? A new research about prewns is published yestoday in the journal PLOS ONE. According to the study, small and hungry prawns are more likely to be resourceful in the face of adversity than their less desperate counterparts. What's worthy to say, size and hunger have different effects, which depends on whether the prawns are acting alone or in a group. To be more specific, small individuals were more likely to innovate when they are alone.However, when they are in a group, size didn't matter and it was the hungry prawns that are more likely to be most resourceful. Innovation can allow individuals, no matter they are prawns or primates, to access new resources and deal with new urgent incidents. But we can know that the drivers of innovation are more complex than previously thought. Read more:http://www.cusabio.com/Recombinant-Protein/Recombinant-human-Target-of-rapamycin-complex-2-subunit-MAPKAP1-11089635.html

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