(Press-News.org) A team of researchers has outlined a new approach for better understanding the depths of animal consciousness, a method that may yield new insights into the similarities and differences among living organisms.
The essay, which appears in the journal Science, describes a “marker method” that scientists can use to assess animal consciousness. It involves identifying behavioral and anatomical features associated with conscious processing in humans and searching for similar properties in nonhumans. By making progress in the science of animal consciousness, the authors propose, we can make progress on foundational questions about the nature of consciousness, potentially improving our understanding of the human mind.
“When humans and other animals perform similar behaviors, and when the best explanation for these behaviors in humans involves conscious experience, then that could be considered evidence…of conscious experience in other animals, too,” write Kristin Andrews, a philosophy professor at York University, Jonathan Birch, a philosophy professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science, and Jeff Sebo, a professor in New York University’s Department of Environmental Studies, in the Science essay “Evaluating Animal Consciousness.”
The publication comes nearly a year after the “New York Declaration on Animal Consciousness,” which demonstrated the scientific backing for consciousness among all vertebrates and many invertebrates, among other species, the Times of London and others reported. The declaration, organized by Andrews, Birch, and Sebo, has now been signed by more than 500 scientists and other researchers around the globe.
Philosophers, including Jeremy Bentham, and scientists, notably Charles Darwin, have considered questions linked to animal consciousness while John Stuart Mill, in the mid-19th century, acknowledged the challenge of broadly assessing consciousness. Well into the 21st century, a secure theory of consciousness remains elusive, and disagreement and uncertainty about the scope of consciousness in the animal kingdom remain ongoing.
In their essay, Andrews, Birch, and Sebo describe an approach that includes “identifying a particular dimension of consciousness,” such as experiencing pain or seeing an object, and then “seeking evidence that such markers are present (or absent) in the target species.” They then call for new directions of inquiry, including research on dimensions of consciousness other than pain experience and non-invasive research methods.
However, they recognize the limitations of individual markers to serve as strong evidence by themselves. “The degree to which a particular marker can increase or decrease confidence in particular dimensions of animal consciousness depends on context,” they write. “For instance, linguistic behavior is a marker of specific kinds of conscious thought and emotion in humans. But as demonstrated by large language models that simulate human conversation, linguistic behavior alone is not strong evidence of consciousness in nonhuman systems.”
Despite these challenges, the authors emphasize the importance of continued exploration. “The idea that there is a ‘realistic possibility’ of consciousness in all vertebrates and many invertebrates may eventually be replaced by more confident language,” they conclude. “But for as long as the evidence remains limited and mixed, it is important to keep an open mind and strive to learn more.”
# # #
END
Researchers outline new approach for better understanding animal consciousness
Proposed behavioral markers offer innovative way for better understanding both animals and humans
2025-02-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Bioinspired robot collectives that can act like solids or fluids on demand
2025-02-20
Inspired by the cooperation of cells in tissues, researchers have developed a robotic collective system capable of transitioning between rigid and solid structures that can also support hundreds of times its own weight. The advancement overcomes a core challenge in the development of so-called “robotic materials” – cohesive networks of individual robotic units that function as a single dynamic, adaptive structure. Realizing these systems presents a fundamental challenge: this “material” must at once be strong and stiff enough to support loads, ...
AI-assisted diagnosis for immunological disease
2025-02-20
A novel machine learning framework – Mal-ID – can decipher an individual’s immune system’s record of past infections and diseases, according to a new study, providing a powerful tool with the potential for diagnosing autoimmune disorders, viral infections, and vaccine responses with precision. Traditional clinical diagnostic methods for autoimmune diseases or other immunological pathologies tend to rely on a combination of physical examination, patient history, and various laboratory testing for cellular or molecular abnormalities – a lengthy process often complicated by initial misdiagnoses and ambiguous systems. These approaches make limited use of data from ...
A new approach for breaking plastic waste down to monomers
2025-02-20
Researchers have reported a method for breaking down commercial polymers like Plexiglass into monomers, a form more desirable for reuse. This could help alleviate the growing plastic waste stream. Most current plastic recycling methods rely on macroscopic mechanical shredding, cleaning and reprocessing. As a result, the properties degrade relative to the virgin polymer. Chemical decomposition to the original monomer would enable more thorough purification and then repolymerization to restore ideal performance. Here, Hyun Suk Wang and colleagues report the discovery that in dichlorobenzene solvent, violet light irradiation ...
High-performance computing at a crossroads
2025-02-20
High-performance computing (HPC) systems – advanced computing ensembles that harness deliver massive processing power – are used for a range of applications, and the demand for them has increased with the rise of generative artificial intelligence (AI). However, for both traditional uses and to advance the power of AI, technical advances in HPC are greatly needed, say Ewa Deelman and colleagues in a Policy Forum. “With international competition for leadership in computing intensifying, without a renewed commitment, ...
Chemists find greener path to making key industrial chemical
2025-02-20
Scientists have discovered a potentially greener way to produce a crucial industrial chemical used to make many everyday products from plastics and textiles to antifreeze and disinfectants, according to a new study published in Science and co-authored by Tulane University chemical engineer Matthew Montemore.
The breakthrough could significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the manufacture of ethylene oxide, which has an estimated $40 billion global market. The current production process requires chlorine, which is toxic and ...
Giant X-ray facility shows that magnets can reduce flaws in 3D printed components
2025-02-20
Safety critical components for aircraft and Formula 1 racing cars could one day be 3D printed via a new technique, developed by researchers at UCL and the University of Greenwich, that substantially reduces imperfections in the manufacturing process.
The technique was developed after the team used advanced X-ray imaging to observe the causes of imperfections that formed in complex 3D printed metal alloy components. If this technique becomes widely deployed it could make a range of these components, from artificial hip joints to aircraft parts, stronger and more durable.
The study, published in Science, observes the forces at play during ...
Cooling materials – Out of the 3D printer
2025-02-20
Rapid, localized heat management is essential for electronic devices and could have applications ranging from wearable materials to burn treatment. While so-called thermoelectric materials convert temperature differences to electrical voltage and vice versa, their efficiency is often limited, and their production is costly and wasteful. In a new paper published in Science, researchers from the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) used a 3D printing technique to fabricate high-performance thermoelectric materials, reducing production costs significantly.
Thermoelectric coolers, also called solid-state ...
New knowledge portal adiposetissue.org enhances obesity and metabolism research with centralized data
2025-02-20
Addressing the Challenge of Dispersed Data
For years, adipose tissue research has generated vast amounts of omics data, but these datasets remained scattered across different repositories, making comprehensive analysis challenging. Adiposetissue.org now brings insights together, integrating transcriptomic and proteomic with clinical data from more than 6,000 individuals, enabling researchers to explore obesity-related changes, weight-loss effects, and cellular mechanisms with unprecedented depth.
“We developed ...
Study suggests new molecular strategy for treating fragile X syndrome
2025-02-20
Building on more than two decades of research, a study by MIT neuroscientists at The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory reports a new way to treat pathology and symptoms of fragile X syndrome, the most common genetically-caused autism spectrum disorder. The team showed that augmenting a novel type of neurotransmitter signaling reduced hallmarks of fragile X in mouse models of the disorder.
The new approach described in Cell Reports works by targeting a specific molecular subunit of “NMDA” receptors that they discovered plays a key role in how neurons synthesize ...
Digging into a decades-old hepatitis B mystery suggests a new potential treatment
2025-02-20
In their effort to answer a decades-old biological question about how the hepatitis B virus (HBV) is able to establish infection of liver cells, research led by Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK), Weill Cornell Medicine, and The Rockefeller University identified a vulnerability that opens the door to new treatments.
The team successfully disrupted the virus’s ability to infect human liver cells in the laboratory using a compound already in clinical trials against cancer — laying the ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Perovskite solar cells: Thermal stresses are the key to long-term stability
University of Houston professors named senior members of the National Academy of Inventors
Unraveling the mystery of the missing blue whale calves
UTA partnership boosts biomanufacturing in North Texas
Kennesaw State researcher earns American Heart Association award for innovative study on heart disease diagnostics
Self-imaging of structured light in new dimensions
Study highlights successes of Virginia’s oyster restoration efforts
Optimism can encourage healthy habits
Precision therapy with microbubbles
LLM-based web application scanner recognizes tasks and workflows
Pattern of compounds in blood may indicate severity of gestational hypertension and preeclampsia
How does innovation policy respond to the challenges of a changing world?
What happens when a diet targets ultra-processed foods?
University of Vaasa, Finland, conducts research on utilizing buildings as energy sources
Stealth virus: Zika virus builds tunnels to covertly infect cells of the placenta
The rising tide of sand mining: a growing threat to marine life
Contemporary patterns of end-of-life care among Medicare beneficiaries with advanced cancer
Digital screen time and nearsightedness
Postoperative weight loss after anti-obesity medications and revision risk after joint replacement
New ACS research finds low uptake of supportive care at the end-of-life for patients with advanced cancer
New frailty measurement tool could help identify vulnerable older adults in epic
Co-prescribed stimulants, opioids linked to higher opioid doses
What if we could revive waste carbon dioxide?
Mechanochemistry strikes again – A facile means for generating organolithium molecules
Breakthrough in high-performance oxide-ion conductors using rubidium
Hurricane-proofed downtown skyscrapers unexpectedly vulnerable to ‘bouncing’ winds
Microcomb chips help pave the way for thousand times more accurate GPS systems
Illuminating the proton’s inner workings
Genetic therapy gives infants life-changing improvements in sight
Impacts of workplace bullying on sleep can be “contagious” between partners
[Press-News.org] Researchers outline new approach for better understanding animal consciousnessProposed behavioral markers offer innovative way for better understanding both animals and humans