Embodiment in distributed information processing: "Solid" plants versus "liquid" ant colonies.

Laura van Schijndel, Basten L Snoek, Kirsten Ten Tusscher
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Information processing is an essential part of biology, enabling coordination of intra-organismal processes such as development, environmental adaptation and inter-organismal communication. Whilst in animals with specialised brain tissue a substantial amount of information processing occurs in a centralised manner, most biological computing is distributed across multiple entities, such as cells in a tissue, roots in a root system or ants in a colony. Physical context, called embodiment, also affects the nature of biological computing. While plants and ant colonies both perform distributed computing, in plants the units occupy fixed positions while individual ants move around. This distinction, solid versus liquid brain computing, shapes the nature of computations. Here we compare information processing in plants and ant colonies, highlighting how similarities and differences originate in, as well as make use of, the differences in embodiment. We end with a discussion on how this embodiment perspective may inform the debate on plant cognition.

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分布式信息处理的体现:“固体”植物与“液体”蚁群。
信息处理是生物学的重要组成部分,它能够协调生物内部的过程,如发育、环境适应和生物间的交流。虽然在具有专门脑组织的动物中,大量的信息处理以集中的方式发生,但大多数生物计算是分布在多个实体上的,例如组织中的细胞,根系中的根或蚁群中的蚂蚁。物理环境,称为具体化,也影响生物计算的性质。虽然植物和蚁群都执行分布式计算,但在植物中,单位占据固定位置,而单个蚂蚁四处移动。这种区分,固体和液体大脑计算,塑造了计算的本质。在这里,我们比较了植物和蚁群的信息处理,强调了相似性和差异性是如何产生的,以及如何利用体现上的差异。最后,我们讨论了这种体现视角如何为关于植物认知的辩论提供信息。
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