Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hormonal_sentience> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 42 of
42
with 100 triples per page.
- Hormonal_sentience abstract "Hormonal sentience, first described by Robert A. Freitas Jr., describes the information processing rate in plants, which are mostly based on hormones instead of neurons like in all major animals (except sponges). Plants can to some degree communicate with each other and there are even examples of one-way-communication with animals.Acacia trees produce tannin to defend themselves when they are grazed upon by animals. The airborne scent of the tannin is picked up by other acacia trees, which then start to produce tannin themselves as a protection from the nearby animals.When attacked by caterpillars, some plants can release chemical signals to attract parasitic wasps that attack the caterpillars.A similar phenomenon can be found not only between plants and animals, but also between fungus and animals. There exists some sort of communication between a fungus garden and workers of the leaf-cutting ant Atta sexdens rubropilosa. If the garden is fed with plants that are poisonous for the fungus, it signals this to the ants, which then will avoid fertilizing the fungus garden with any more of the poisonous plant.The Venus flytrap, during a 1- to 20-second sensitivity interval, counts two stimuli before snapping shut on its insect prey, a processing peak of 1 bit/s. Mass is 10-100 grams, so the flytrap's SQ is about +1. Plants generally take hours to respond to stimuli though, so vegetative SQs (Sentience Quotient) tend to cluster around -2. In theory even an organism with a hormonal system instead of a nervous system could be intelligent in some degree, but it would be an extremely slow brain, to say the least.And yet, at least higher plants are able to produce electrical signals, even if they do not use them in the same way animals do. František Baluška from the University of Bonn in Germany is one of the authorities on plant neurobiology.".
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageExternalLink Xenopsychology.htm.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageID "2506847".
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageLength "2215".
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageRevisionID "639183113".
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Acacia.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Atta_sexdens.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Biosemiotics.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Category:Botany.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Caterpillar.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Hormone.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Information_processing.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Neuron.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Neurons.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Parasitic_wasp.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Parasitoid_wasp.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Phytosemiotics.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Plant.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Plant_neurobiology.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Plant_perception_(physiology).
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Plants.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Robert_A._Freitas_Jr..
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Freitas.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Sentience_Quotient.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Sentience_quotient.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Tannin.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Bonn.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLink Venus_flytrap.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hormonal sentience".
- Hormonal_sentience hasPhotoCollection Hormonal_sentience.
- Hormonal_sentience wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Hormonal_sentience subject Category:Botany.
- Hormonal_sentience comment "Hormonal sentience, first described by Robert A. Freitas Jr., describes the information processing rate in plants, which are mostly based on hormones instead of neurons like in all major animals (except sponges). Plants can to some degree communicate with each other and there are even examples of one-way-communication with animals.Acacia trees produce tannin to defend themselves when they are grazed upon by animals.".
- Hormonal_sentience label "Hormonal sentience".
- Hormonal_sentience sameAs إحساسية_هرمونية.
- Hormonal_sentience sameAs m.07jn7w.
- Hormonal_sentience sameAs Q13509843.
- Hormonal_sentience sameAs Q13509843.
- Hormonal_sentience wasDerivedFrom Hormonal_sentience?oldid=639183113.
- Hormonal_sentience isPrimaryTopicOf Hormonal_sentience.