Researchers explain evolution of consciousness in stages

Scientists have outlined three evolutionary stages of consciousness, from basic alarm responses to self-awareness, suggesting it is an ancient trait shared widely across species. New research highlights that birds exhibit forms of sensory perception and self-consciousness similar to mammals, challenging previous assumptions about its origins. This framework, known as the ALARM theory, emphasizes survival and social functions.

Consciousness, the subjective experience that colors daily life from pleasant sensations to painful ones, evolved to enhance survival and social coordination, according to philosophers Albert Newen and Carlos Montemayor. They propose three forms in their ALARM theory: basic arousal, general alertness, and reflexive self-consciousness.

Basic arousal emerged first in evolutionary history as a rapid response to threats. Newen explains, "Evolutionarily, basic arousal developed first, with the base function of putting the body in a state of ALARM in life-threatening situations so that the organism can stay alive." Pain serves as a key signal here, prompting actions like fleeing or freezing to protect the body from damage.

General alertness followed, enabling organisms to prioritize critical stimuli amid distractions. For instance, attention might shift from a conversation to the smell of smoke, allowing learning of causal links, such as smoke indicating fire. Montemayor notes, "This makes it possible to learn about new correlations: first the simple, causal correlation that smoke comes from fire and shows where a fire is located. But targeted alertness also lets us identify complex, scientific correlations."

Reflexive self-consciousness, which involves reflecting on one's own states, thoughts, and actions, developed alongside these basics. It supports memory, future planning, and social integration. A hallmark is mirror self-recognition, seen in human children around 18 months and in animals like chimpanzees, dolphins, and magpies. Newen states, "Reflexive consciousness, in its simple forms, developed parallel to the two basic forms of consciousness. In such cases conscious experience focuses not on perceiving the environment, but rather on the conscious registration of aspects of oneself."

Recent studies by Gianmarco Maldarelli and Onur Güntürkün extend this to birds, showing they possess sensory consciousness beyond mere reactions. Pigeons interpret ambiguous images subjectively, alternating views like humans, while crow brain signals align with perceived rather than external stimuli. Bird brains feature the nidopallium caudolaterale (NCL), analogous to the mammalian prefrontal cortex, with dense connections for flexible processing. Güntürkün observes, "The avian equivalent to the prefrontal cortex, the NCL, is immensely connected and allows the brain to integrate and flexibly process information." Their forebrain connectome mirrors mammalian patterns, satisfying criteria from theories like the Global Neuronal Workspace.

Birds also display basic self-perception. Pigeons and chickens distinguish mirror images from real conspecifics, responding contextually—a sign of situational self-consciousness, per Güntürkün: "Experiments indicate that pigeons and chickens differentiate between their reflection in a mirror and a real fellow member of their species, and react to these according to context. This is a sign of situational, basic self-consciousness."

These findings, published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B in 2025, indicate consciousness arose early in evolution, functioning effectively across diverse brain structures without a cerebral cortex.

Makala yanayohusiana

Scientists in a lab urgently discussing consciousness amid holographic displays of brains, AI, and organoids, highlighting ethical risks from advancing neurotech.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Scientists say defining consciousness is increasingly urgent as AI and neurotechnology advance

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI Imethibitishwa ukweli

Researchers behind a new review in Frontiers in Science argue that rapid progress in artificial intelligence and brain technologies is outpacing scientific understanding of consciousness, raising the risk of ethical and legal mistakes. They say developing evidence-based tests for detecting awareness—whether in patients, animals or emerging artificial and lab-grown systems—could reshape medicine, welfare debates and technology governance.

An evolutionarily ancient midbrain region, the superior colliculus, can independently carry out visual computations long attributed mainly to the cortex, according to a PLOS Biology study. The work suggests that attention-guiding mechanisms with roots more than 500 million years old help separate objects from backgrounds and highlight salient details.

Imeripotiwa na AI Imethibitishwa ukweli

A review article by Borjan Milinkovic and Jaan Aru argues that treating the mind as software running on interchangeable hardware is a poor fit for how brains actually compute. The authors propose “biological computationalism,” a framework that ties cognition and (potentially) consciousness to computation that is hybrid, multi-scale, and shaped by energy constraints.

In a recent podcast episode, economist Topher McDougal discusses his book exploring whether Earth is evolving a collective intelligence amid environmental crisis and technological advances. Drawing on the Gaia hypothesis, he introduces the concept of 'Gaiacephalos' as a potential planetary mind reshaping human roles. The discussion highlights paradoxes in human progress and calls for a holistic view of emerging systems.

Imeripotiwa na AI

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.

Evolutionary anthropologists argue that human physiology, honed over hundreds of thousands of years for active, nature-rich hunter-gatherer lives, is poorly suited to the chronic pressures of industrialized environments. This mismatch, they say, is contributing to declining fertility and rising rates of inflammatory disease, and should prompt a rethink of how cities and societies are designed.

Imeripotiwa na AI Imethibitishwa ukweli

University of Notre Dame researchers report evidence that general intelligence is associated with how efficiently and flexibly brain networks coordinate across the whole connectome, rather than being localized to a single “smart” region. The findings, published in Nature Communications, are based on neuroimaging and cognitive data from 831 Human Connectome Project participants and an additional 145 adults from the INSIGHT Study.

Jumatatu, 23. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 13:43:36

Birdwatching may reshape brain and buffer against ageing

Alhamisi, 5. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 15:50:17

Two-month-old babies categorize objects earlier than thought

Jumatano, 4. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 20:13:40

MIT paper lays out how focused ultrasound could test theories of consciousness

Jumatano, 4. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 07:52:47

Scientists identify genetic shift that enabled vertebrate evolution

Jumatano, 21. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 20:30:16

Octopuses challenge idea that big brains evolve from social life

Jumatano, 21. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 14:56:44

Fossils reveal earliest vertebrates may have had four eyes

Jumatano, 14. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 14:54:00

Alpha brain waves shape sense of body ownership

Jumanne, 23. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 01:37:42

Researchers uncover eight brain maps linking vision to touch

Jumatano, 10. Mwezi wa kumi na mbili 2025, 18:31:14

Human brain’s voice area shows selective response to chimpanzee calls

Ijumaa, 28. Mwezi wa kumi na moja 2025, 11:21:02

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

 

 

 

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa