Improving the Signal to Noise Ratio – Coda
In a Scientific American column delightfully named "The Artful Amoeba" there is an article on a little critter called the "fire chaser" beetle: How a Half-Inch Beetle Finds Fires 80 Miles Away - Fire chaser beetles' ability to sense heat borders on the spooky
Why a creature would choose to enter a situation from which all other forest creatures are enthusiastically attempting to exit is a compelling question of natural history. But it turns out the beetle has a very good reason. Freshly burnt trees are fire chaser beetle baby food. Their only baby food.
Fire chaser beetles are thus so hell bent on that objective that they have been known to bite firefighters, mistaking them, perhaps, for unusually squishy and unpleasant-smelling trees.
This part is interesting:
A flying fire chaser beetle appears to be trying to give itself up to the authorities. Its second set of legs reach for the sky at what appears to be an awkward and uncomfortable angle.
But the beetle has a good reason. It’s getting its legs out of the way of its heat eyes, pits filled with infrared sensors tucked just behind its legs.
A strategy suggested by the fire beetle life cycle is if you want to maximize a signal to noise ratio, iterate through three simple things:
Work to develop a super well defined signal/goal/objective.
Remove every possible barrier to receiving information about that signal - mental, emotional, even physical - that you can think of or that you discover over time.
Repeat
Also, the "Way of the Amoeba" is now the "Way of the Artful Amoeba." Update your phrase books accordingly.
See also:
Photo by Marco Zoppi on Unsplash