Back in 2010, a team of researchers from Japan and the U.K. fed a slime mold with nutrients arranged to imitate the nodes of the Tokyo subway system. The resulting network was strikingly similar to the real thing, and sparked the emergence of what is now known as biologically inspired adaptive network design.

#lukebelmar #mushrooms #mycelium #brain #braincells #neuropla #biohacking #health #spiritual
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ccbiohacking

2024-04-13 09:27:11

i like mushrooms i've ever done mushrooms no okay you should do mushrooms you would actually really enjoy them so i have a thesis for psilocybin mushrooms and i'm just going to put this out there but japanese scientists paul stamets who's the leading expert on mushrooms observed that there's an experiment that japanese scientists did in what they did is there was a labyrinth that represented the tokyo subway system and they planted mycelium aka the mushroom and they placed food on the other side of this virtual toy version of the subway system and the mycelium through time found a more optimized way of finding the end point than the engineers had crafted
the tokyo underground metro system so the entire japanese current metro system is based on the mycelium networks movement because it is intelligent so when you consume the mushroom you're actually tapping into datasets in truth that come from the earth