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Scientists have taught bees to smell the coronavirus. They can identify a case within seconds.


The animals could be a low-tech solution for identifying COVID-19 cases.
Scientists in the
The research was conducted on more than 150 bees in Wageningen University s bio-veterinary research laboratory.
The scientists trained the bees by giving them a treat - a sugar-water solution - every time they were exposed to the scent of a mink infected with COVID-19. Each time the bees were exposed to a non-infected sample, they wouldn t get a reward (a process known as Pavlovian conditioning).
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Eventually, the bees could identify an infected sample within a few seconds - and would then stick out their tongues like clockwork to collect the sugar water. ....

Holger Volk , Wageningen University , ஹோல்கர் வோல்க் ,

Lab reveals bizarre COVID breakthrough


Health
by Alex Blair
9th May 2021 4:53 AM
The imminent threat posed by COVID-19 has seen a wide range of left-field solutions emerge out of labs over the past year as scientists scurry to stem the spread of the unprecedented pandemic.
In February, scientists at the US University of South Carolina developed an artificial intelligence capable of generating vaccine designs in mere seconds, a process which has historically taken years to carry out by teams of researchers.
The demand for fast and reliable testing remains stronger than ever as infection rates continue to soar around the globe, prompting a number of alternatives to the traditional PCR test. In July 2020, a team of researchers for BMC Infectious Diseases revealed dogs could be used to detect coronavirus in patients at a success rate of 94 per cent. ....

Holger Volk , Wageningen Bioveterinary Research , Us University Of South Carolina , South Carolina , Volatile Organic Compounds , World Bee Day , Covid 19 , ஹோல்கர் வோல்க் , தெற்கு கரோலினா , நிலையற்ற ஆர்க்யாநிக் கலவைகள் , உலகம் தேனீ நாள் ,

Covid-19 coronavirus: Dutch scientists teach bees to detect Covid virus


Covid-19 coronavirus: Dutch scientists teach bees to detect Covid virus
8 May, 2021 07:16 PM
3 minutes to read
Scientists have been working around the clock to find new testing methods for Covid-19. Photo / Getty
Scientists have been working around the clock to find new testing methods for Covid-19. Photo / Getty
news.com.au
By: Alex Blair
The imminent threat posed by Covid-19 has seen a wide range of left-field solutions emerge out of labs over the past year as scientists scurry to stem the spread of the unprecedented pandemic.
In February, scientists at the US University of South Carolina developed an artificial intelligence capable of generating vaccine designs in mere seconds, a process which has historically taken years to carry out by teams of researchers. ....

Holger Volk , Wageningen Bioveterinary Research , Us University Of South Carolina , South Carolina , Volatile Organic Compounds , ஹோல்கர் வோல்க் , தெற்கு கரோலினா , நிலையற்ற ஆர்க்யாநிக் கலவைகள் ,

Bees Have Been Trained to Smell COVID-19 And Identify a Case Within Seconds


KELLY MCLAUGHLIN & ARIA BENDIX, BUSINESS INSIDER
7 MAY 2021
The research was conducted on more than 150 bees in Wageningen University s bio-veterinary research laboratory.
 
The scientists trained the bees by giving them a treat – a sugar-water solution – every time they were exposed to the scent of a mink infected with COVID-19. Each time the bees were exposed to a non-infected sample, they wouldn t get a reward (a process known as Pavlovian conditioning).
Eventually, the bees could identify an infected sample within a few seconds – and would then stick out their tongues like clockwork to collect the sugar water.
Bees aren t the first animals to detect COVID-19 by scent. Researchers have also trained dogs to distinguish between positive and negative COVID-19 samples from human saliva or sweat with fairly high levels of accuracy. A small German study found that dogs could identify positive COVID-19 samples 94 percent of the time. ....

Holger Volk , Wageningen University , ஹோல்கர் வோல்க் ,