Szubtropikus sötétség A nyom slime mold tokyo subway Dekoráció lelkes gépírónő
What brainless moulds may teach us
Ethan Mollick on X: "Slime mold can be used to solve exponentially hard problems, like optimizing the Tokyo rail system. By placing food on a “map” at the location of population centers,
How Japan Used Oats And Mold To Make Its Subway System More Efficient
Scientists Used Slime Mold To Create The Most Efficient Traffic Map For The United States | Bored Panda
TIL Scientists put slime mold onto a model of a map of Tokyo, with food representing urban centers. After a day, it created a network almost identical to Tokyo's actual rail network.
Slime Mold Grows Network Just Like Tokyo Rail System | WIRED
Slime Mold replicates the Tokyo rail network : r/woahdude
Comparison of the Physarum networks with the Tokyo rail network. (A) In... | Download Scientific Diagram
Slime mold is master network engineer
Slime mold is master network engineer
Brainless slime mold grows in pattern like Tokyo's subway system | Communicating Science 2017 Section 211
Slime Mold Beats Humans at Perfecting Traffic Networks | Live Science
Tokyo rail network formation with Physarum polycephalum [84]. | Download Scientific Diagram
Slime Mold Proves That Intelligence Isn't That Difficult | Slime mould, Slime, Science fact
Ride the Slime Mold Express! | Science | AAAS
Physarum polycephalum - Wikipedia
Slime mould mimics Tokyo's railway | CBC News
Tokyo rail network designed by Physarum plasmodium - YouTube
Inside Japan's most ambitious plan to create the world's most optimized and efficient urban transport system
Slime Mold Grows Network Just Like Tokyo Rail System | WIRED
Better transit design through ... slime mold?
Slime Mold Grows Network Just Like Tokyo Rail System | WIRED
slime mold
Comparison of the Physarum networks with the Tokyo rail network. (A) In... | Download Scientific Diagram
Brainless Slime Mold Builds a Replica Tokyo Subway | Discover Magazine
Brainless slime mold grows in pattern like Tokyo's subway system | Biodesign @ Berkeley
Slime mould researchers may be poised to rule the world | New Scientist