Single-celled organism shows capability for Pavlovian learning

Researchers have demonstrated that the single-celled protist Stentor coeruleus can engage in associative learning, similar to Pavlov's experiments with dogs. This finding suggests such cognitive abilities may predate the evolution of brains by hundreds of millions of years. The study highlights unexpected complexity in simple organisms.

The trumpet-shaped protist Stentor coeruleus, which lacks a brain or neurons, inhabits ponds and measures up to 2 millimeters in length. It swims using hair-like cilia and attaches to surfaces via a holdfast at one end, while feeding through a trumpet-like apparatus at the other. When attached, these organisms filter feed, but they contract into a sphere if disturbed, halting feeding in the process.

Sam Gershman at Harvard University and his colleagues investigated Stentor coeruleus's learning potential through conditioning experiments. Initially, they applied strong taps to the bottom of Petri dishes containing cultures of dozens of these cells every 45 seconds for a total of 60 taps. The organisms contracted rapidly at first but habituated over time, with fewer contractions as the taps continued, demonstrating the basic learning form of habituation.

In a more advanced test, the researchers paired a weak tap—typically eliciting fewer contractions—with a strong tap occurring 1 second later. This sequence repeated every 45 seconds across 10 trials, aligning with the time needed for Stentor to unfurl. The contraction rate after the weak tap initially rose before declining, a pattern not observed with the weak tap alone. "We saw this bump in the graph where the contraction rate initially goes up before going down," Gershman explained.

This response indicates associative learning, where the weak tap becomes linked to the stronger one, marking the first such demonstration in a protist. "It raises the question of whether apparently simple organisms are capable of aspects of cognition that we generally associate with much more complex, multicellular organisms with brains," Gershman noted. The discovery points to an ancient origin for this learning type, predating multicellular nervous systems by hundreds of millions of years.

Shashank Shekhar at Emory University, who has studied Stentor aggregation for efficient feeding, called the results fascinating. "It’s fascinating that a single cell can do such complex things that we thought required a brain, that required neurons, that required behavioural learning," he said. Shekhar suspects other unicellular organisms may possess similar abilities. The mechanism likely involves touch-sensitive receptors allowing calcium influx, altering cell voltage and triggering contraction, with repeated stimuli modifying these receptors as a molecular switch for memory storage.

The findings appear in a preprint on bioRxiv (DOI: 10.64898/2026.02.25.708045).

ተያያዥ ጽሁፎች

Realistic depiction of a rhesus macaque in a Princeton lab with brain overlay showing prefrontal cortex assembling reusable cognitive 'Lego' modules for flexible learning.
በ AI የተሰራ ምስል

Princeton study reveals brain’s reusable ‘cognitive Legos’ for flexible learning

በAI የተዘገበ በ AI የተሰራ ምስል እውነት ተፈትሸ

Neuroscientists at Princeton University report that the brain achieves flexible learning by reusing modular cognitive components across tasks. In experiments with rhesus macaques, researchers found that the prefrontal cortex assembles these reusable “cognitive Legos” to adapt behaviors quickly. The findings, published November 26 in Nature, underscore differences from current AI systems and could eventually inform treatments for disorders that impair flexible thinking.

Researchers at MIT have discovered chemical evidence in rocks over 541 million years old suggesting that ancient sea sponges were among Earth's first animals. The findings, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, identify molecular fingerprints matching compounds from modern demosponges. This builds on earlier work and confirms the signals originate from biological sources rather than geological processes.

በAI የተዘገበ

A new study on cephalopods suggests that large brains may evolve due to environmental factors rather than social interactions. Researchers analyzed brain sizes across 79 species and found links to habitat complexity, not sociality. This prompts a rethink of why animals like octopuses develop complex nervous systems.

A suite of recent studies in American Chemical Society journals describes two‑year‑old brain organoids with measurable activity, a wearable electrospinning glove for on‑site wound patches, an edible coating from the Brazilian “wolf apple” that kept baby carrots fresh for up to 15 days at room temperature, and microplastics detected in post‑mortem human retinas.

በAI የተዘገበ

New research shows that everyday sights and sounds can trap some people in harmful choices by influencing their brains through associative learning. Those highly sensitive to these cues struggle to update their responses when outcomes turn negative, leading to persistent risky behavior. The findings, led by Giuseppe di Pellegrino at the University of Bologna, highlight implications for addictions and anxiety.

Scientists at Arizona State University have identified two unexpected ways bacteria can spread without their usual flagella structures. In one study, E. coli and salmonella use sugar fermentation to create fluid currents for surface migration, dubbed 'swashing.' A separate study reveals a molecular 'gearbox' in flavobacteria that controls directional movement.

በAI የተዘገበ

Researchers have uncovered how soft-bodied organisms from 570 million years ago were exceptionally preserved in sandstone, defying typical fossilization challenges. The discovery points to ancient seawater chemistry that formed clay cements around the buried creatures. This insight sheds light on the evolution of complex life before the Cambrian Explosion.

 

 

 

ይህ ድረ-ገጽ ኩኪዎችን ይጠቀማል

የእኛን ጣቢያ ለማሻሻል ለትንታኔ ኩኪዎችን እንጠቀማለን። የእኛን የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ አንብቡ የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ ለተጨማሪ መረጃ።
ውድቅ አድርግ