Frantisek Baluska : What a Plant Knows and Perceives
Mon statut pour la session
Quoi:
Talk
Quand:
9:00 AM, Mardi 3 Juil 2018
(1 heure 30 minutes)
Où:
Université du Québec à Montréal
- DS-R510
consciousnessbiologyplant synapsesplant neurobiologyevolutionproblem-solving
Frantisek Baluska (Speaker)
University of Bonn, Institute for Cellular and Molecular Botany
University of Bonn, Institute for Cellular and Molecular Botany
Suzanne Held (Moderator)
Bristol Veterinary School (University of Bristol)
Bristol Veterinary School (University of Bristol)
Plant science considers plants passive organisms, not capable of cognition and behavior. Yet already in 1880 Charles and Francis Darwin had noted that this was an over-simplification. According to Karl Popper (1994), all life is problem-solving. Plant scientists today still maintain that plants perceive and process environmental information automatically, with no neuron-like sensory-motor systems and cognitive processes. Yet evidence is emerging that plants actively sense their environment and have sensory-motor systems that are sensitive to anesthetics. Hence some kind of sentience/consciousness may underlie their responsiveness to their sensory experiences and their capacity to control their plant-specific cognition and behavior.
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Gagliano M (2017) The mind of plants: thinking the unthinkable. Commun Integr Biol 10: 1288333
Popper K (1994) All Life is Problem Solving. Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group
Trewavas A, Baluška (2011) The ubiquity of consciousness. EMBO Rep 12: 1221-1225
Yokawa K, Kagenishi T, Pavlovič A, Gall S, Weiland M, Mancuso S, Baluška F (2017) Anesthetics block plant action potentials and stop plant movements. Ann Bot, In press