Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Did you hear about the octopus that slipped out of its tank, into a drainpipe, and made

  • a break for the sea?

  • Or what about the cephalopod that figured out how to open those child-proof pill bottles?

  • Which, let's be honest, even adult humans have trouble with those sometimes.

  • It's fair to say octopuses are smart.

  • But when we talk about the intelligence of other animals, we tend to fall into the trap

  • of comparing them to humans -- testing for everything from the size of their brains,

  • to qualities like emotions or learning abilities.

  • But octopuses are very different from people, I don't know if you've noticed.

  • On the evolutionary tree, they are a long way off from us.

  • And they're probably way more complex than we might realize or understand.

  • So your brain is in your head.

  • And so are the brains of other animals we consider intelligent, like dogs, dolphins,

  • chimps, and crows.

  • Octopuses have central brains in their heads, as well, and we have some anatomical similarities.

  • For example, their brains generate similar electrical patterns as vertebrates, and they

  • seem to have specialized brain areas for things like learning and memory storage.

  • They also seem to have a dominant, or preferred, eye -- which is an example of lateralization,

  • similar to the way people are right- and left-handed.

  • But the weird thing is: about two-thirds of their neurons are in their arms.

  • Each arm literally has a mind of its own -- to do its own problem solving and act independently,

  • while the other arms are doing something completely different.

  • In a 2013 research study, scientists isolated arms from dead octopuses in order to test

  • those neuronal responses.

  • And they found the isolated arms recoil from being pinched, or from touching tap water

  • or acetic acid.

  • This suggests that they might have some kind of nociceptors -- or special neurons that

  • sense danger and pain, like ones that make us pull our hand back when touching a hot

  • stove.

  • But -- unlike in humans -- their arms can respond to these kind of stimuli without being

  • attached to a central brain.

  • Other experiments have found that the severed arms wriggle around, and even grab onto food.

  • So, anatomically, octopuses are some pretty cool invertebrates.

  • But what about their behavior?

  • Octopuses have been observed using tools -- like picking up two coconut halves to use as a

  • mobile home -- and manipulating objects in a way that looks a lot like playing.

  • One 1993 study published in the Journal of Comparative Psychology even suggested that

  • octopuses seem to display distinct personalities -- reacting to food and threats in individual,

  • but consistent ways.

  • One octopus might be consistently curious and daring, while another is careful and shy.

  • Another study, in 2001, seemed to show that young octopuses changed their behavior over

  • the course of weeks, becoming more alert to danger and learning from their environment.

  • So octopuses do seem to have some sort of advanced cognition -- learning and changing

  • their behaviors over time.

  • Even though we might see a lot of ourselves in the behavior of octopuses, we certainly

  • didn't get there on the same path.

  • Our vertebrate evolutionary branch split from the mollusks about 1.2 billion years ago,

  • so human and octopus intelligence evolved completely separately.

  • Scientists have lots of different theories to try and explain how humans evolved intelligence

  • -- and one of them relates to our social lifestyle.

  • Basically, forming long-lasting relationships could've meant better survival.

  • But octopuses don't have that specific evolutionary pressure -- they only live for a couple of

  • years and are almost always alone.

  • So, how did these creatures evolve their intelligence and central brain -- while other mollusks,

  • like oysters, didn't?

  • Well, it might have something to do with the most obvious thing that separates an octopus

  • from an oyster -- the shell!

  • At some point in their evolution, the octopus's ancestors probably traded the safety of a

  • shell for freedom.

  • Suddenly, they could move around and forage for food, using a variety of hunting skills.

  • But they also had to to worry about becoming dinner -- which led to all kinds of strategies

  • to avoid being eaten: like hiding, camouflage, tool use, and speed.

  • And all that self-preservation requires some sort of intelligence.

  • The smarter octopuses would've had a better chance of survival.

  • Octopuses might not look like us, move like us, live like us, or probably even think like

  • us.

  • But they have somehow evolved intelligence in ways we're only beginning to understand.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow, which was brought to you by our patrons on

  • Patreon.

  • If you want to help support this show, so you can learn more cool things about octopuses….

  • just go to patreon.com/scishow.

  • And don't forget to go to youtube.com/scishow and subscribe!

Did you hear about the octopus that slipped out of its tank, into a drainpipe, and made

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it