Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Even fruit flies can help spot bombs and drugs

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Oct, 2014 10:45 AM
    The "nose" of fruit flies can identify odours emanating from illicit drugs and explosive substances almost as accurately as wine odour, says a study.
     
    A fly's sense of smell could, in fact, be used in a new technology to detect drugs and bombs.
     
    The study brought scientists closer to developing electronic noses (e-noses) that closely replicate the sensitive olfactory sense of animals.
     
    "In looking at fruit flies, we found that contrary to our expectation, unfamiliar odours such as from explosives were not only recognised but broadly recognised with the same accuracy as odours more relevant to a fly's behaviour," said lead researcher Thomas Nowotny, professor at the University of Sussex in Britain.
     
    The researchers recorded how 20 different receptor neurons in fruit flies responded to an ecologically relevant set of 36 chemicals related to wine and an ecologically irrelevant set of 35 chemicals related to hazardous materials.
     
    By monitoring the "firing rate" of each neuron, they were able to assess which smells elicited the strongest reactions from the flies.
     
    They then used a computer programme to simulate the part of the fly's brain used for recognition to show that the receptor responses contained enough information to recognise odours.
     
    Of the wine set, 29 out of the 36 compounds elicited clear excitatory responses in at least one receptor neuron.
     
    The flies also responded to 21 out of the 35 substances related to drugs and explosives.
     
    "The long-term goal of this research direction is to 'recreate' animals' noses for technical applications," Nowotny added.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Bioinspiration and Biomimetics.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Modesty holding women back at work: Study

    Modesty holding women back at work: Study
    Do you find yourself holding back in conversations and hiding your true credentials? Ladies, it's time to make a change and banish the barriers and be...

    Modesty holding women back at work: Study

    Parents could drive car choices of kids

    Parents could drive car choices of kids
    What brand of car you drive may influence the car choices of your kids too, says a study.

    Parents could drive car choices of kids

    These days, you need self-control to stay alive

    These days, you need self-control to stay alive
    This writer saved at least five people from being physically attacked yesterday. How? By exercising self-control. "Idiots have a right to live," is the wonderfully....

    These days, you need self-control to stay alive

    Why drinking makes a smile more contagious among men

    Why drinking makes a smile more contagious among men
    Alcohol induces a sort of "social bravery" among men, disrupting processes that would normally prevent them from responding to another person's smile, says....

    Why drinking makes a smile more contagious among men

    Jet fuel oil seed boosts liver detoxification

    Jet fuel oil seed boosts liver detoxification
    Crushed seeds left after oil extraction from Camelina sativa seed, an oilseed crop used in jet fuel, may boost liver detoxification enzymes nearly fivefold, says a study....

    Jet fuel oil seed boosts liver detoxification

    14 percent Britons have partners they have never met!

    14 percent Britons have partners they have never met!
    In an indication of how much the virtual world has become part of our real lives, a survey has found that one in seven people in Britain has relationship...

    14 percent Britons have partners they have never met!