Consciousness: A Strategy for Behavioral Decisions.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Consciousness: A Strategy for Behavioral Decisions.
Authors: Grinde, Bjørn1 (AUTHOR) grinde10@hotmail.com
Source: Encyclopedia. Mar2023, Vol. 3 Issue 1, p60-76. 17p.
Subject Terms: *MONETARY unions, *NERVOUS system, *DECISION making, *AMNIOTES
Abstract: Most multicellular animals have a nervous system that is based on the following three components: (1) sensory cells gather information and send it to processing units; (2) the processing units use the information to decide what action to take; and (3) effector neurons activate the appropriate muscles. Due to the importance of making the right decisions, evolution made profound advances in processing units. I review present knowledge regarding the evolution of neurological tools for making decisions, here referred to as strategies or algorithms. Consciousness can be understood as a particularly sophisticated strategy. It may have evolved to allow for the use of feelings as a 'common currency' to evaluate behavioral options. The advanced cognitive capacity of species such as humans further improved the usefulness of consciousness, yet in biological terms, it does not seem to be an optimal, fitness-enhancing strategy. A model for the gradual evolution of consciousness is presented. There is a somewhat arbitrary cutoff as to which animals have consciousness, but based on current information, it seems reasonable to restrict the term to amniotes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Academic Search Complete
More Details
ISSN:26738392
DOI:10.3390/encyclopedia3010005
Published in:Encyclopedia
Language:English