植物和我们一样有两种思维。

Plant signaling & behavior Pub Date : 2025-12-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-11 DOI:10.1080/15592324.2025.2474895
Tomonori Kawano, Yoshiaki Ushifusa, Stefano Mancuso, Frantisek Baluška, Lucia Sylvain-Bonfanti, Delphine Arbelet-Bonnin, François Bouteau
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文仔细分析了行为经济学中提出的认知相关理论,将人类行为的概念扩展到植物行为。行为经济学家分析了直觉和理性思维对人类行为的影响,采用了基于心理学的模型,如强调直觉快速思维(系统1)和理性缓慢思维(系统2)的两种思维理论(TMT)和具有概率(p)加权函数的前景理论(PT),解释了人类倾向于高估低p事件和低估高p事件。无意识加工的系统1 (TMT)和对低p事件的高估(如PT)之间有相似之处,有意识加工的系统2 (TMT)和对高p事件的低估(如PT)之间也有相似之处。虽然大多数已知的p加权数学模型采用单一函数,但我们提出了一对反映直觉(系统1)和理性(系统2)对应的两种自动机的集体行为的Hill-type函数,作为分层植物叶片中自然光处理的隐喻。然后,将该模型应用于两种不同的TMT/ pt相关行为,即偏好逆转和习惯化。此外,我们通过上述概念框架强调了植物的行为,这意味着植物的行为就好像它们有两个头脑。最后,讨论了双心性可能的进化起源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Plants have two minds as we do.

This discussion paper carefully analyzes the cognition-related theories proposed for behavioral economics, to expand the concepts from human behaviors to those of plants. Behavioral economists analyze the roles of the intuitive sense and the rational thoughts affecting the human behavior, by employing the psychology-based models such as Two Minds theory (TMT) highlighting intuitive rapid thoughts (System 1) and rational slower thoughts (System 2) and Prospect theory (PT) with probability (p)-weighting functions explaining the human tendencies to overrate the low p events and to underrate the high p events. There are similarities between non-consciously processed System 1 (of TMT) and overweighing of low-p events (as in PT) and also, between the consciously processed System 2 (of TMT) and underrating of high-p events (as in PT). While most known p-weighting mathematical models employed single functions, we propose a pair of Hill-type functions reflecting the collective behaviors of two types of automata corresponding to intuition (System 1) and rationality (System 2), as a metaphor to the natural light processing in layered plant leaves. Then, the model was applied to two different TMT/PT-related behaviors, namely, preference reversal and habituation. Furthermore, we highlight the behaviors of plants through the above conceptual frameworks implying that plants behave as if they have Two Minds. Lastly, the possible evolutionary origins of the nature of Two Minds are discussed.

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