Can Brainless Animals Think? Live Science

Can Brainless Animals Think? Live Science
Creatures like sea stars, jellyfish, sea urchins and sea anemones don’t have brains, yet they can capture prey, sense danger and react to their surroundings.
So does that mean brainless animals can think?
Creatures like jellyfish, sea anemones and hydras possess diffuse nerve nets — webs of interconnected neurons distributed throughout the body and tentacles, saidTamar Lotanhead of the Cnidarian Developmental Biology and Molecular Ecology Lab at the University of Haifa in Israel.
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“The nerve net can process sensory input and generate organized motor responses (e.g., swimming, contraction, feeding, and stinging), effectively performing information integration without a brain,” she told Live Science in an email.
This simple setup can support surprisingly advanced behavior. Sprecher’s team showed that the starlet sea anemone (Nematostella vectensis)can form associative memories— learning to link two unrelated stimuli. In the experiment, the researchers trained sea anemones to associate a harmless flash of light with a mild shock. Eventually, the light alone made them retract.
Another experiment showed that sea anemones canlearn to recognize genetically identical neighborsafter repeated encounters and curb their usual territorial aggression. The fact that anemones change their behavior toward genetically identical neighbors suggests they candistinguish between “self” and “non-self”.
A study led byJan Bieleckia neurobiologist at Kiel University in Germany, showed that box jellyfish canassociate visual cues with the physical sensation of bumping into objectshelping them navigate around obstacles effectively.
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“It is my core belief that learning can be achieved by single neurons,” Bielecki told Live Science in an email.
So if animals with nerve nets instead of brains can remember and learn from experience, does that mean they can think?
“This is a tricky question to answer,” Sprecher said. The definition of ‘thinking’ depends on the field. Psychologists, biologists and neuroscientists define ‘thinking’ differently, Bielecki noted.
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Additionally, “thinking is too vague a concept,” Bielecki said. Scientists study things like decision-making, pattern recognition, associative learning, memory formation and inductive reasoning. Each has their own, much narrower definition.
Ken Chenga professor of animal behavior at Macquarie University in Australia, noted that scientists tend to use the word “cognition” instead of “thinking.”
“Scientists shy away from the term ‘thinking’ because thinking, to most of us, means something running through the head, and we don’t have a good way to verify that in another animal or nonanimal species,” Cheng told Live Science. Even “cognition” does not have an agreed-upon definition, he said, but “in the broadest sense, cognition is information processing — using information from the world, including the world inside an organism, to do things.”
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If thinking is that broad sense of cognition, then all life-forms think, Cheng said. This includes animals like marine sponges and placozoans, whichprocess informationabout their surroundings to keep themselves alive. But when it comes to “advanced cognition,” which goes beyond basic learning, however, scientists aren’t sure whether brainless animals can think, Cheng said.
Basic cognition can be regarded as any change in behavior that goes beyond reflexes, Sprecher said. By that definition, brainless animals do show cognition. “However, advanced types of cognitive abilities might require consciousness or self-awareness,” he said.
Lotan pointed out that cnidarians (an animal family that includes jellyfish, sea anemones and many other marine invertebrates), which evolved than 700 million years ago, continue to thrive while many animals with brains have long disappeared.
“This resilience suggests that they possess a unique adaptive system enabling them to endure and flourish through extreme environmental changes over geological timescales — despite lacking a brain,” she said. Their neurons allow them to sense and interpret their surroundings, “perhaps representing a rudimentary form of thinking.”
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Disclaimer: This news article has been republished exactly as it appeared on its original source, without any modification. We do not take any responsibility for its content, which remains solely the responsibility of the original publisher.
Disclaimer: This news article has been republished exactly as it appeared on its original source, without any modification.
We do not take any responsibility for its content, which remains solely the responsibility of the original publisher.
Author: uaetodaynews
Published on: 2025-11-09 14:00:00
Source: uaetodaynews.com




