Brain
An octopus has roughly 500 million neurons, and more than two-thirds of them are distributed across its eight arms rather than its central brain. The brain issues high-level commands while each arm independently handles the details—a decentralized nervous system.
0
The brain of a cephalopod is shaped like a donut, with the esophagus running straight through the center. Even in a 300 kg colossal squid, the esophagus is only about 10 mm in diameter—so swallowing too large a piece of food can compress the brain and cause damage.
0
You can't tickle yourself because your brain predicts outcomes of your own actions and ignores matching sensations. However, schizophrenia patients — whose prediction systems are impaired — can indeed tickle themselves.
0
The urge to squeeze or bite something extremely cute is a real phenomenon called "Cute Aggression." Yale University research found it's a defense mechanism: the brain generates slight negative emotions to counterbalance overwhelming positive feelings — similar to crying tears of joy.
0