The brain is not mental! coupling neuronal and immune cellular processing in human organisms.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience Pub Date : 2023-05-17 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnint.2023.1057622
Anna Ciaunica, Evgeniya V Shmeleva, Michael Levin
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Abstract

Significant efforts have been made in the past decades to understand how mental and cognitive processes are underpinned by neural mechanisms in the brain. This paper argues that a promising way forward in understanding the nature of human cognition is to zoom out from the prevailing picture focusing on its neural basis. It considers instead how neurons work in tandem with other type of cells (e.g., immune) to subserve biological self-organization and adaptive behavior of the human organism as a whole. We focus specifically on the immune cellular processing as key actor in complementing neuronal processing in achieving successful self-organization and adaptation of the human body in an ever-changing environment. We overview theoretical work and empirical evidence on "basal cognition" challenging the idea that only the neuronal cells in the brain have the exclusive ability to "learn" or "cognize." The focus on cellular rather than neural, brain processing underscores the idea that flexible responses to fluctuations in the environment require a carefully crafted orchestration of multiple cellular and bodily systems at multiple organizational levels of the biological organism. Hence cognition can be seen as a multiscale web of dynamic information processing distributed across a vast array of complex cellular (e.g., neuronal, immune, and others) and network systems, operating across the entire body, and not just in the brain. Ultimately, this paper builds up toward the radical claim that cognition should not be confined to one system alone, namely, the neural system in the brain, no matter how sophisticated the latter notoriously is.

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大脑不是精神!人类生物体的神经元和免疫细胞处理耦合在一起。
过去几十年来,人们为了解大脑神经机制如何支撑精神和认知过程做出了巨大努力。本文认为,要理解人类认知的本质,一个很有希望的前进方向就是从以神经为基础的主流图景中走出来。相反,它考虑了神经元如何与其他类型的细胞(如免疫细胞)协同工作,为整个人类有机体的生物自组织和适应行为提供服务。我们特别关注免疫细胞的处理过程,它是神经元处理过程的重要补充,使人体在不断变化的环境中成功实现自组织和适应。我们概述了有关 "基础认知 "的理论研究和经验证据,对只有大脑中的神经元细胞才具有 "学习 "或 "认知 "能力的观点提出了质疑。对细胞而非神经、大脑处理的关注强调了这样一种观点,即对环境波动的灵活反应需要在生物有机体的多个组织层次上对多个细胞和身体系统进行精心设计的协调。因此,认知可以被视为分布在大量复杂细胞(如神经元、免疫和其他系统)和网络系统中的动态信息处理的多尺度网络,它在整个身体而不仅仅是大脑中运行。最终,本文提出了一个激进的主张,即认知不应只局限于一个系统,即大脑神经系统,无论后者有多么复杂。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience Neuroscience-Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
2.90%
发文量
148
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience publishes rigorously peer-reviewed research that synthesizes multiple facets of brain structure and function, to better understand how multiple diverse functions are integrated to produce complex behaviors. Led by an outstanding Editorial Board of international experts, this multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics, clinicians and the public worldwide. Our goal is to publish research related to furthering the understanding of the integrative mechanisms underlying brain functioning across one or more interacting levels of neural organization. In most real life experiences, sensory inputs from several modalities converge and interact in a manner that influences perception and actions generating purposeful and social behaviors. The journal is therefore focused on the primary questions of how multiple sensory, cognitive and emotional processes merge to produce coordinated complex behavior. It is questions such as this that cannot be answered at a single level – an ion channel, a neuron or a synapse – that we wish to focus on. In Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience we welcome in vitro or in vivo investigations across the molecular, cellular, and systems and behavioral level. Research in any species and at any stage of development and aging that are focused at understanding integration mechanisms underlying emergent properties of the brain and behavior are welcome.
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