The need for a new perspective on decision-making in bacteria
Sibin Mathew Nesin, Mathew Chandrankunnel

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new perspective on how bacteria make decisions, suggesting they may have flexible, individualistic behaviors similar to those seen in more complex organisms.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new model for bacterial decision-making based on converging and diverging molecular pathways.
Findings
Bacterial decision-making may involve multiple pathways with convergence and divergence.
This model could explain individualistic behavior in bacteria.
The approach draws parallels between bacterial and human decision-making mechanisms.
Abstract
The individualistic and collectivistic intelligent behaviors observed in mammals, birds, and fishes have been appreciated by many scientists in recent years and supported by the Cambridge Declaration on Consciousness in 2012. Behavioral studies in lower organisms like arthropods and cephalopods showed the presence of multisensory integration, decision-making, and goal-directed behavior in these non-vertebrate animals. The presence of intelligent and history-dependent behaviors has been studied in microorganisms, and recent studies propose the possibility of cognition in single cellular organisms. The Cellular Basis of Consciousness (CBC), proposed by Arthur Reber in 2016 and elaborated by Baluška and Reber in 2019, suggests the possibility of consciousness in single cellular organisms. However, the critics of the Cellular Basis of Consciousness theory state that the individual bacterial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Gut microbiota and health · Vibrio bacteria research studies
