| Literature DB >> 25926819 |
Abstract
Research on how bacteria adapt to changing environments underlies the contemporary biological understanding of signal transduction (ST), and ST provides the foundation of the information-processing approach that is the hallmark of the 'cognitive revolution,' which began in the mid-20th century. Yet cognitive scientists largely remain oblivious to research into microbial behavior that might provide insights into problems in their own domains, while microbiologists seem equally unaware of the potential importance of their work to understanding cognitive capacities in multicellular organisms, including vertebrates. Evidence in bacteria for capacities encompassed by the concept of cognition is reviewed. Parallels exist not only at the heuristic level of functional analogue, but also at the level of molecular mechanism, evolution and ecology, which is where fruitful cross-fertilization among disciplines might be found.Entities:
Keywords: cognition; communication; evolution; information-processing; learning; memory; signal transduction; valence
Year: 2015 PMID: 25926819 PMCID: PMC4396460 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Broadly biological and narrowly human conceptions of the capacities encompassed by the general concept of cognition (Lyon, 2006).
| Capacity | Biological (broad) | Human (narrow) |
|---|---|---|
| Affect | Valence: attraction, repulsion, neutrality (hedonic response). | Hedonic response plus conditioned or unconditioned cognitive appraisal (i.e., this is good/not good). |
| Sense perception | Ability to recognize existentially salient features of the external or internal milieu. | Conceptually mediated feature sensing. |
| Discrimination | Ability to determine that a state of affairs affords an existential opportunity or presents a challenge, requiring a change in internal state or behavior. | Ability to differentiate a state of affairs as a particular state of affairs and not another; having a concept. |
| Memory | Retention of information about a state of affairs for a non-zero period. | Retained information spatio-temporally decoupled from an immediate stimulus, which can be explicit/declarative or implicit/ procedural. |
| Learning | Experienced-modulated behavior change. | Classical conditioning; ability to change rules governing behavior. |
| Problem solving | Behavior selection in circumstances with multiple parameters and high degrees of uncertainty; adaptability. | Rational decision-making, abstract thinking. |
| Communication | Mechanism for initiating purposive interaction with conspecifics (or non-conspecific others). | Verbal or written symbol systems whose units have semantic content (meaning) and their deployment is organized according to rules (syntax), both of which are conventionally established expressly for the purpose of information exchange. |
| Motivation | Teleonomic striving; implicit goals arising from existential conditions. | Goal-driven behavior; goal is explicit (i.e., to the agent). |
| Anticipation | Behavioral change based on expectancy (i.e., if X is happening, then Y should happen). | Expectation based on past experience (potentially) explicit to the agent; planning. |
| Awareness | Orienting response; ability to selectively attend. | Reflexive awareness; ’what it is like to be X’. |
| Self-reference | Mechanism for distinguishing ‘self or’ like self from ‘non-self’ or ‘not like self’. | Self-awareness; concept of ‘self’. |
| Normativity | Error detection, behavior correction. | Value assignment based on experience, motivational state and/or convention. |
| Intentionality∗ | Directedness toward an object. | Beliefs and desires. |
| The capacity to sense and recognize (re-cognize) existentially salient features of the surrounding milieu. | |
| The capacity of an organism to assign a value to the summary of information about its surroundings at a given moment, relative to its own current state. | |
| The capacity of an organism to adapt via changing its spatial, structural or functional relation to its external or internal milieu. | |
| The capacity to retain information about the immediate (and possibly distant) past, and to calibrate the sensorium to take account of this information, for example, via signal amplification. | |
| The capacity to adapt behavior according to past experience, enabling a faster response time. | |
| The capacity to predict what is likely to happen next based on an early stimulus. | |
| The capacity to combine information from multiple sources, because all organisms appear to sense more than one thing, and some bacterial species are equipped to sense dozens of different states of affairs. | |
| The capacity to interact profitably with conspecifics, including initiating collective action, which may or may not include an explicit method of differentiating 'us' from 'them'. |
Genome size and signal transduction, by millions of base pairs (Mbp) and type of system.
| Organism | Genome (Mbp) | 1CS | 2CS | CT | ECF | OTHER | TOTAL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 39.3 | 2,624 | 497 | 149 | 20 | 31 | 3,321 | |
| 9.7 | 719 | 152 | 46 | 12 | 8 | 937 | |
| 9.1 | 315 | 263 | 60 | 41 | 8 | 687 | |
| 7.6 | 362 | 78 | 13 | 1 | 5 | 459 | |
| 6.4 | 447 | 131 | 46 | 21 | 8 | 655 | |
| 6.1 | 417 | 90 | 35 | 6 | 7 | 555 | |
| 4.2 | 230 | 89 | 66 | 3 | 6 | 394 | |
| 4.2 | 254 | 71 | 18 | 7 | 2 | 352 | |
| 3.1 | 119 | 34 | – | – | 2 | 155 | |
| 0.6 | 5 | – | – | 1 | – | 6 | |
| 0.4 | 3 | – | – | – | – | 3 |
Alternative terms for autoinduction based on dominant factors influencing concentrations of AI molecules.
| Term | Factor |
|---|---|
| Quorum sensing | Local population density |
| Positional sensing | Spatial organization of cells |
| Cluster sensing | Spatial organization and distribution of cells in clumps |
| Diffusion sensing | Diffusion rates |
| Compartment sensing | Limited diffusion due to enclosure |
| Confinement induced QS | Limited diffusion due to enclosure |
| Efficiency sensing | Local cell density and diffusion rates |
| Cumulative gradient sensing | Accumulated cue as determined by cell density, production rate, and diffusion rate |
| Diel sensing | Cue stability due to pH conditions that vary periodically |