Fish were kept in underwater cages and recorded using cameras to check for changes in behavior Date: 08 June 2023 Nicolas Job Download full-resolution image Share on: Related Images Watching Nereus Dive Researchers watch footage of Nereus, an unmanned robotic vehicle, dive into the Kermadec Trench, one of the deepest ocean trenches in the world. Photo by Sadie Mills. Crown-of-Thorns Starfish Crown-of-Thorns starfish in the waters off of Onna village. Paths on the Lattice Chandrashekar used lattices such as these to move a particle step by step. Some lattices contained missing connections, creating gaps where the particle cannot travel. Barnacle Species Two Neoverruca barnacles. The white scale bar measures one centimeter in length. (Photo: Hiromi Watanabe and JAMSTEC) Professor Kenji Doya Professor Kenji Doya, head of the Neural Computation Unit at OIST
Watching Nereus Dive Researchers watch footage of Nereus, an unmanned robotic vehicle, dive into the Kermadec Trench, one of the deepest ocean trenches in the world. Photo by Sadie Mills.
Watching Nereus Dive Researchers watch footage of Nereus, an unmanned robotic vehicle, dive into the Kermadec Trench, one of the deepest ocean trenches in the world. Photo by Sadie Mills.
Paths on the Lattice Chandrashekar used lattices such as these to move a particle step by step. Some lattices contained missing connections, creating gaps where the particle cannot travel.
Paths on the Lattice Chandrashekar used lattices such as these to move a particle step by step. Some lattices contained missing connections, creating gaps where the particle cannot travel.
Barnacle Species Two Neoverruca barnacles. The white scale bar measures one centimeter in length. (Photo: Hiromi Watanabe and JAMSTEC)
Barnacle Species Two Neoverruca barnacles. The white scale bar measures one centimeter in length. (Photo: Hiromi Watanabe and JAMSTEC)