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- Title
Why an animal needs a brain.
- Authors
Sterling, Peter; Laughlin, Simon
- Abstract
In Principles of Neural Design (2015, MIT Press), inspired by Charles Darwin, Sterling and Laughlin undertook the unfashionable task of distilling principles from facts in the technique-driven, data-saturated domain of neuroscience. Their starting point for deriving the organizing principles of brains are two brainless single-celled organisms, Escherichia coli and Paramecium, and the 302-neuron brain of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. The book is an exemplar in how to connect the dots between simpler and (much) more complex organisms in a particular area. Here, they have generously agreed to republish an abridged version of Chapter 2 (Why an Animal Needs a Brain), in which many of their principles are first described.
- Subjects
UNICELLULAR organisms; ESCHERICHIA coli; CAENORHABDITIS elegans; PARAMECIUM
- Publication
Animal Cognition, 2023, Vol 26, Issue 6, p1751
- ISSN
1435-9448
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10071-023-01825-7