Alan Turing’s 60-Year-Old Prediction About Patterns in Nature Proven True
Nature, for all of its free-wheeling weeds and lightning strikes, is also full of biological regularity: the rows of an alligator’s teeth, the stripes on a zebrafish, the spacing of a chicken’s feathers. How do these patterns arise?Sixty years ago, with nothing but numbers, logic and some basic biological know-how, mathematician Alan Turing (best known for his pioneering work on artificial intelligence) came up with an explanation. He proposed that two chemicals—an “activator” and an “inhibitor”—work together, something like a pencil and eraser. The activator’s expression would do something—say, make a stripe—and the inhibitor would shut off the activator. This repeats, and voilà, stripe after stripe after stripe.On Sunday, researchers reported the first experimental evidence that Turing’s theory is correct, by studying the eight evenly spaced ridges that form on the roof of a mouse’s mouth. (People, by the way, have four such ridges on each side, which help us feel and taste food.)Read more at...Smithsonian's Surprising Science, February 2012.