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The_Dragon42 |
movement
Apr 28 2009, 3:54 AM EDT
The nerves work through a series of electro-chemical reactions, forgeting the enigma of how a zombie brain works IF it could function there is no reason (unless the nerves controlling them have been damaged) that breathing and/or heart would not resume as normal. Then we would end up with a second race of infantile (but most likely unable to learn), canabalistic humans.
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DevilNuts |
1. RE: movement
Apr 28 2009, 7:15 PM EDT
There is a theory that the infection takes a portion of the brain and reanimates it in order to control the host - more like a parasite than a virus. In this case you would not necessarily see those functions resume as well. There is actually something like this that occurs in nature today, some virus transferred through bird poo which infects ants and makes them behave erratically, climbing to the top of grass and waving around. This makes them easier to spot for birds, which eat the ants and get infected, then transferring the infection to more ants via more poo. ..... I could be full of shit, but I remember reading about it somewhere. Can anyone back that up or refute it? Do you find this valuable? |
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inu-dude25 |
2. RE: movement
Apr 28 2009, 8:27 PM EDT
It affects several insects actually. And they will move out to the tips of leaves and tree branches and just sit there, for no apparent reason.
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