Insects may have consciousness

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Insects may have consciousness and could even be able to count, claim experts
'Animals with bigger brains are not necessarily more intelligent,' said Professor Lars Chittka, from Queen Mary's Research Centre for Psychology, writing in the journal Current Biology.

'We know that body size is the single best way to predict an animal's brain size.

'However, contrary to popular belief, we can't say that brain size predicts their capacity for intelligent behaviour.

'In bigger brains we often don't find more complexity, just an endless repetition of the same neural circuits over and over.

'This might add detail to remembered images or sounds, but not add any degree of complexity. To use a computer analogy, bigger brains might in many cases be bigger hard drives, not necessarily better processors.'

Differences in brain size between animals can be extreme. A whale's brain can weigh up to nine kilograms and be packed with more than 200 billion nerve cells.

Human brains vary in weight between 1.25 kilograms and 1.45 kilograms, and have an estimated 85 billion neurons.

In contrast, a honeybee's brain weighs one milligram and contains fewer than a million nerve cells.

Many size differences existed only in specific brain regions, the scientists pointed out.

This was often the case in animals with highly developed senses, such as sight or hearing, or which have an ability to make very precise movements.

Increased size allowed the brain to function in more detail, finer resolution, and higher sensitivity or to achieve greater precision.

Research suggested that bigger animals may need larger brains simply because there was more to control. More nerves were needed to move bigger muscles, for example.

Much 'advanced' thinking could be done with very limited numbers of neurons, the scientists claimed.



Read more: Insects may have consciousness and could even be able to count, claim experts
 
From April 18, 2016
Insects Have Consciousness, Self-Awareness and Egos - News
Insects are conscious, egocentric beings, according to a new paper that also helps to explain why and likely when consciousness first evolved.

Recent neuroimaging suggests insects are fully hardwired for both consciousness and egocentric behavior, providing strong evidence that organisms from flies to fleas exhibit both.

Consciousness comes in many levels, and researchers say that insects have the capacity for at least one basic form: subjective experience.

“When you and I are hungry, we don’t just move towards food; our hunger also has a particular feeling associated with it,” Colin Klein, who co-authored the new paper, told Discovery News. “An organism has subjective experience if its mental states feel like something when they happen.”

Klein, a researcher at Macquarie University, and colleague Andrew Barron studied detailed neuroimaging reports concerning insect brains. They then compared the structure of such brains with those of humans and other animals. The resulting information is published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.