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Cue

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Customer service00 61 2 9299 2222
FoundedSydney
Australia
Listen artist www.youtube.com
Members Anders Melander
Albums Cue
GenresPop Music
SongsSongsBurnin'Cue · 2000 HelloCue · 2000 Guggi BagJudge Hater · 2015 View 25+ more
ListBurnin'Cue · 2000
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ID2316198
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About Cue


Cue is a Swedish pop duo group made up of musician Anders Melander and Niklas Hjulström. They have topped the Swedish Singles Chart with "Burnin'". Anders Melander was a composer working for the Swedish TV and a theatre director at Angeredsteatern. He was also much earlier a member in the progg band Nationalteatern.

Oxford University: Goldfish do have good memories, scientists find

Feb 16,2020 5:58 am

Scientists have proved goldfish do have good memories and are able to navigate their surroundings.

A team from Oxford University trained nine fish to travel 70cm (2. 3ft) and back, receiving a food reward at The End .

Researchers said it showed the fish could accurately estimate distance.

The study disproves the long-held belief goldfish have little or no memory.

The university's department of biology scientists wanted to find out if fish have ways of navigating similar to land-based animals.

They used a narrow tank covered with a repeating pattern of vertical stripes every 2cm.

On reaching The Set distance, the fish were prompted by an external Cue - Such as a researcher waving their hand - to Turn Around and swim back to the start position.

The researchers then tested if the fish would swim the same distance if the starting position was changed and the Cue was removed

They also tested if goldfish would swim the same distance when the background pattern was altered.

They found eight of The Nine fish accurately remembered when to Turn Back to get their reward of food, without being prompted.

The fish also continued to swim the correct distance even when their start position was shifted forwards.

According to the researchers, the results indicate that goldfish estimate distances by looking for the apparent motion of patterns in their environment, called optic flow.

They said many terrestrial species are known to use optic flow to estimate distance, but goldfish appear to process The Information differently.

Terrestrial animals, including humans and Honey Bees , estimate distances by measuring how the angle between their eye and surrounding objects changes as they travel.

Goldfish appear to use The Number of contrast changes experienced en-route, the researchers said.



Source of news: bbc.com

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