Cognition and Decision: Difference between revisions

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== <br> '''Decision-Making and Free Will in Biological Organisms''' <br><br>  ==
== <br> '''Decision-Making and Free Will in Biological Organisms''' <br><br>  ==


Gabor Balazsi, Alexander van Oudenaarden, and James J. Collins Cellular<br> [http://www.bu.edu/abl/files/cell_balazsi.pdf Cellular Decision Making and Biological Noise: From Microbes to Mammals]  
Gabor Balazsi, Alexander van Oudenaarden, and James J. Collins<br> [http://www.bu.edu/abl/files/cell_balazsi.pdf Cellular Decision Making and Biological Noise: From Microbes to Mammals]  


Alexander Maye, Chih-hao Hsieh, George Sugihara, Bjorn Brembs<br> [http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0000443 Order in Spontaneous Behavior]  
Alexander Maye, Chih-hao Hsieh, George Sugihara, Bjorn Brembs<br> [http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0000443 Order in Spontaneous Behavior]  

Revision as of 15:12, 29 August 2011

 

CognitiondecisionCover1.jpg
CognitiondecisionCover1.jpg


Cognition and Decision

edited by Steven Shaviro

Introduction

What is the relationship between life and thought? Are all living organisms capable of thinking? Or is thought restricted to animals with nervous systems and brains? Or is it restricted only to human beings, or to us and a few of the other ‘higher’ animals? In any case, what is the relation between thought (which takes place, we like to say, in the mind) and the actual physical processes that take place in the brains of animals and human beings when they are thinking? For that matter, what does it mean to say that thinking, like other forms of organic activity, is subject to, and determined by, physical laws? Is it meaningful to ascribe ‘free will’ to human beings and other organisms? Or are thought processes strictly deterministic, so that ‘free will’ is just an illusion?

These are all speculative, metaphysical questions, which philosophers have been actively discussing for at least several thousand years. They cannot be answered by science alone. But at the very least, biological research of the past several decades has given us vastly more information about cognition and thought, in human beings and in other organisms, than we ever possessed before. In what follows, I would like to look briefly at some of this research, and ponder its implications. (more)


Decision-Making and Free Will in Biological Organisms

Gabor Balazsi, Alexander van Oudenaarden, and James J. Collins
Cellular Decision Making and Biological Noise: From Microbes to Mammals

Alexander Maye, Chih-hao Hsieh, George Sugihara, Bjorn Brembs
Order in Spontaneous Behavior

Björn Brembs
Towards a Scientific Concept of Free Will as a Biological Trait: Spontaneous Actions and Decision-making in Invertebrates


Bacterial Cognition

Eshel Ben Jacob, Yoash Shapira, Alfred I. Tauber
Seeking the Foundations of Cognition in Bacteria: From Schrodinger's Negative Entropy to Latent Information


Plant Cognition

Anthony Trewavas
Aspects of Plant Intelligence

Ian T. Baldwin, Rayko Halitschke, Anja Paschold, Caroline C. von Dahl, Catherine A. Preston
Volatile Signaling in Plant-Plant Interactions: "Talking Trees" in the Genomics Era


Cognition and Decision in Slime Molds

Toshiyuki Nakagaki, Ryo Kobayashi, Yasumasa Nishiura, and Tetsuo Ueda
Obtaining Multiple Separate Food Sources: Behavioural Intelligence in the Physarum plasmodium

Tanya Latty and Madeleine Beekman
Irrational Decision-making in an Amoeboid Organism: Transitivity and Context-dependent Preferences


The Biological Basis of Cognition, Decision, Activity, and Moods

Björn Brembs
The Importance of Being Active

Melissa Bateson, Suzanne Desire, Sarah E. Gartside, and Geraldine A. Wright
Agitated Honeybees Exhibit Pessimistic Cognitive Biases

Attributions