Literature DB >> 19686801

Origins of learned reciprocity in solitary ciliates searching grouped 'courting' assurances at quantum efficiencies.

Kevin B Clark1.   

Abstract

Learning to reciprocate socially valued actions, such as cheating and cooperation, marks evolutionary advances in animal intelligence thought unequalled by even colonial microbes known to secure respective individual or group fitness tradeoffs through genetic and epigenetic processes. However, solitary ciliates, unique among microbes for their emulation of simple Hebbian-like learning contingent upon feedback between behavioral output and vibration-activated mechanosensitive Ca(2+) channels, might be the best candidates to learn to reciprocate necessary preconjugant touches perceived during complex 'courtship rituals'. Testing this hypothesis here with mock social trials involving an ambiguous vibration source, the large heterotrich ciliate Spirostomum ambiguum showed it can indeed learn to modify emitted signals about mating fitness to encourage paired reproduction. Ciliates, improving their signaling expertise with each felt vibration, grouped serial escape strategies gesturing opposite 'courting' assurances of playing 'harder to get' or 'easier to get' into separate, topologically invariant computational networks. Stored strategies formed patterns of action or heuristics with which ciliates performed fast, quantum-like distributed modular searches to guide future replies of specific fitness content. Heuristic-guided searches helped initial inferior repliers, ciliates with high initial reproductive costs, learn to sensitize their behavioral output and opportunistically compete with presumptive mating 'rivals' advertising higher quality fitness. Whereas, initial superior repliers, ciliates with low initial reproductive costs, learned with the aid of heuristics to habituate their behavioral output and sacrifice net reproductive payoffs to cooperate with presumptive 'suitors', a kind of learned altruism only before attributed to animal social intelligences. The present findings confirm that ciliates are highly competent decision makers capable of achieving paired fitness goals through learning.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19686801     DOI: 10.1016/j.biosystems.2009.08.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosystems        ISSN: 0303-2647            Impact factor:   1.973


  9 in total

1.  On classical and quantum error-correction in ciliate mate selection.

Authors:  Kevin B Clark
Journal:  Commun Integr Biol       Date:  2010-07

2.  Arrhenius-kinetics evidence for quantum tunneling in microbial "social" decision rates.

Authors:  Kevin B Clark
Journal:  Commun Integr Biol       Date:  2010-11-01

3.  Plants are intelligent, here's how.

Authors:  Paco Calvo; Monica Gagliano; Gustavo M Souza; Anthony Trewavas
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2020-01-08       Impact factor: 4.357

4.  Social biases determine spatiotemporal sparseness of ciliate mating heuristics.

Authors:  Kevin B Clark
Journal:  Commun Integr Biol       Date:  2012-01-01

5.  Ciliates learn to diagnose and correct classical error syndromes in mating strategies.

Authors:  Kevin B Clark
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2013-08-19       Impact factor: 5.640

6.  Basis for a neuronal version of Grover's quantum algorithm.

Authors:  Kevin B Clark
Journal:  Front Mol Neurosci       Date:  2014-04-17       Impact factor: 5.639

Review 7.  An exploration of how to define and measure the evolution of behavior, learning, memory and mind across the full phylogenetic tree of life.

Authors:  E M Eisenstein; D L Eisenstein; J S M Sarma
Journal:  Commun Integr Biol       Date:  2016-04-20

Review 8.  Bioluminescence and Photoreception in Unicellular Organisms: Light-Signalling in a Bio-Communication Perspective.

Authors:  Youri Timsit; Magali Lescot; Martha Valiadi; Fabrice Not
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-10-20       Impact factor: 5.923

9.  Macromolecular networks and intelligence in microorganisms.

Authors:  Hans V Westerhoff; Aaron N Brooks; Evangelos Simeonidis; Rodolfo García-Contreras; Fei He; Fred C Boogerd; Victoria J Jackson; Valeri Goncharuk; Alexey Kolodkin
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2014-07-22       Impact factor: 5.640

  9 in total

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