Literature DB >> 30826433

Plants as electromic plastic interfaces: A mesological approach.

Marc-Williams Debono1, Gustavo Maia Souza2.   

Abstract

In this manuscript, we propose that plants are eco-plastic and electromic interfaces that can drive emergent intelligent behaviours from synchronized electrical networks. Behind the semantic and anthropocentric problems related by many authors to the extensive use of the terms cognition, intelligence or even 'consciousness' for plants, we suggest a more pragmatic perspective, considering the vegetal world to be a complex biosystemic entity that is able to co-build the world or a form of the world or of significant reality via a set of reciprocal, emerging and confluent interactions. Speaking of adaptive sensory modalities involving perceptual binding or a global state of receptivity nonlinearly leading to cognitive functions, learning capabilities and intelligent behaviours of plants seem to be the more realistic and operational model to describe how plants perceive and treat environmental data. In this study, we strongly suggest that the electrome, which mainly involves constant spontaneous emission of low voltage potentials, is an early marker and a unifying factor of whole plant reactivity in a constantly changing environment and is therefore the key to understanding the cognitive nature of plants. This dynamic coupling enables plants to be knowledge-accumulating systems that are used by evolution to progress and survive, while mesological plasticity is a unique means for plants to interact as subjects with their milieu (umwelt) or natural habitat and to co-signify a possible world.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Keywords:  Cognition; Eco-physiology; Electrome; Electrophysiology; Mesology; Plasticity

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30826433     DOI: 10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2019.02.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prog Biophys Mol Biol        ISSN: 0079-6107            Impact factor:   3.667


  5 in total

1.  Individuality, self and sociality of vascular plants.

Authors:  František Baluška; Stefano Mancuso
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2021-02-08       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  Detection of Different Hosts From a Distance Alters the Behaviour and Bioelectrical Activity of Cuscuta racemosa.

Authors:  André Geremia Parise; Gabriela Niemeyer Reissig; Luis Felipe Basso; Luiz Gustavo Schultz Senko; Thiago Francisco de Carvalho Oliveira; Gabriel Ricardo Aguilera de Toledo; Arlan Silva Ferreira; Gustavo Maia Souza
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2021-03-18       Impact factor: 5.753

3.  Influence of Local Burning on Difference Reflectance Indices Based on 400-700 nm Wavelengths in Leaves of Pea Seedlings.

Authors:  Ekaterina Sukhova; Lyubov Yudina; Ekaterina Gromova; Anastasiia Ryabkova; Vladimir Vodeneev; Vladimir Sukhov
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2021-04-27

4.  Influence of Burning-Induced Electrical Signals on Photosynthesis in Pea Can Be Modified by Soil Water Shortage.

Authors:  Lyubov Yudina; Ekaterina Gromova; Marina Grinberg; Alyona Popova; Ekaterina Sukhova; Vladimir Sukhov
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-02-17

5.  Minimal physicalism as a scale-free substrate for cognition and consciousness.

Authors:  Chris Fields; James F Glazebrook; Michael Levin
Journal:  Neurosci Conscious       Date:  2021-08-02
  5 in total

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