Monday, November 24, 2025

Why do we have a consciousness?



Philosophy and psychology



Ruhr-University Bochum




Purposes of pleasure and pain?

Our conscious experience makes up our lives, often through positive pleasure: I feel the warm sun on my skin, I hear the singing of birds, I enjoy the moment. Yet we also often experience pain: I feel my knee hurt from falling on the stairs, I suffer from always being pessimistic. Why have we, as living creatures, even developed a perception that can involve positive experiences as well as pain and even unbearable suffering?

Albert Newen and Carlos Montemayor categorize three types of consciousness, each with different functions: 1. basic arousal, 2. general alertness, and 3. a reflexive (self-)consciousness. “Evolutionarily, basic arousal developed first, with the base function of putting the body in a state of ALARM in life-threatening situations so that the organism can stay alive,” explains Newen. “Pain is an extremely efficient means for perceiving damage to the body and to indicate the associated threat to its continued life. This often triggers a survival response, such as fleeing or freezing.”

A second step in evolution is the development of general alertness. This allows us to focus on one item in a simultaneous flow of different information. When we see smoke while someone is speaking to us, we can only focus on the smoke and search for its source. “This makes it possible to learn about new correlations: first the simple, causal correlation that smoke comes from fire and shows where a fire is located. But targeted alertness also lets us identify complex, scientific correlations,” says Carlos Montemayor.

Humans and some animals then develop a reflexive (self-)consciousness. In its complex form, it means that we are able to reflect on ourselves as well as our past and future. We can form an image of ourselves and incorporate it into our actions and plans. “Reflexive consciousness, in its simple forms, developed parallel to the two basic forms of consciousness,” explains Newen. “IN such cases conscious experience focuses not on perceiving the environment, but rather on the conscious registration of aspects of oneself.” This includes the state of one’s own body, as well as one’s perception, sensations, thoughts, and actions. To use one simple example, recognizing oneself in the mirror is a form of reflexive consciousness. Children develop this skill at 18 months, and some animals have been shown to do this as well, such as chimpanzees, dolphins, and magpies. Reflexive conscious experiences – as its core function –  makes it possible for us to better integrate into society and coordinate with others.

 

Original publication

Albert Newen, Carlos Montemayor: Three Types of Phenomenal Consciousness and Their Functional Roles: Unfolding the ALARM Theory of Consciousness, in: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2024.0314

 

What Birds Perceive

Gianmarco Maldarelli and Onur Güntürkün show in their article that birds may possess fundamental forms of conscious perception. The researchers highlight three central areas in which birds show remarkable parallels to conscious experience in mammals: sensory consciousness, neurobiological foundations, and accounts of self-consciousness.

Firstly, studies of sensory consciousness indicate that birds not only automatically process stimuli, but subjectively experience them. When pigeons are presented with ambiguous visual stimuli, they shift between various interpretations, similar to humans. Crows have also been shown to possess nerve signals that do not reflect the physical presence of a stimulus, but rather the animal’s subjective perception. When a crow sometimes consciously perceives a stimulus and does not at other times, certain nerve cells react precisely according to this internal experience. 

Secondly, birds’ brains contain functional structures that meet the theoretical requirements of conscious processing, despite their different brain structure. “The avian equivalent to the prefrontal cortex, the NCL, is immensely connected and allows the brain to integrate and flexibly process information,” says Güntürkün. “The connectome of the avian forebrain, which presents the entirety of the flows of information between the regions of the brain, shares many similarities with mammals. Birds thus meet many criteria of established theories of consciousness, such as the Global Neuronal Workspace theory.”

Thirdly, more recent experiments show that birds may have different types of self-perception. Even though some species of corvids pass the traditional mirror test, other ecologically significant versions of the tests have shown further types of self-consciousness in other bird species. “Experiments indicate that pigeons and chickens differentiate between their reflection in a mirror and a real fellow member of their species, and react to these according to context. This is a sign of situational, basic self-consciousness,” says Güntürkün.
The findings suggest that consciousness is an older and more widespread evolutionary phenomenon than had previously been assumed. Birds demonstrate that conscious processing is also possible without a cerebral cortex and that different brain structures can achieve similar functional solutions.

Original publication

Gianmarco Maldarelli, Onur Güntürkün: Conscious Birds. in: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2024.0308
 

What can psychedelics teach us about the sense of self?



Researchers used a psychedelic as a tool to advance understanding of brain activity for the human sense of self.



Society for Neuroscience




When people use a psychedelic called dimethyltryptamine (DMT), they experience a temporary loss of their sense of self. DMT interacts with a frequency of brain activity associated with self-referential processes (alpha waves), but it’s unclear how this activity relates to self-awareness. Christopher Timmerman, at University College London, and Marco Aqil, currently at the University of Miami, are among researchers who used DMT as a tool to explore the relationship between alpha waves and self-awareness.  

As reported in their JNeurosci paper, the researchers discovered that DMT interacts with alpha waves in a way that is associated with stronger ratings of loss of the sense of self, sometimes termed ego death. These activity changes were related to what is termed “criticality.” Elaborates Timmerman, “The way the brain operates between chaos and order allows for normal brain function. Criticality refers to a brain state balanced between chaos and order that helps us predict things about the environment, the way we change or adapt to it, and our self-awareness.” 

Furthermore, the researchers found that this shift away from criticality was a dampening or quieting of alpha waves. Describing what this might mean, says Aqil, “We rely on past narratives and future predictions to have a coherent sense of self. In a DMT experience, people do not have a stream of consciousness over a period of time—everything takes place in the present moment. This shift in criticality signatures in the alpha frequency [during a DMT experience likely reveals how] the time-extended component of the sense of self is weakened.” 

Both Timmerman and Aqil emphasize their work supports the idea that psychedelics may be a powerful tool for unraveling the neurological basis of human consciousness.  

### 

Please contact media@sfn.org for full-text PDF. 

About JNeurosci 

JNeurosci was launched in 1981 as a means to communicate the findings of the highest quality neuroscience research to the growing field. Today, the journal remains committed to publishing cutting-edge neuroscience that will have an immediate and lasting scientific impact, while responding to authors' changing publishing needs, representing breadth of the field and diversity in authorship. 

About The Society for Neuroscience 

The Society for Neuroscience is the world's largest organization of scientists and physicians devoted to understanding the brain and nervous system. The nonprofit organization, founded in 1969, now has nearly 35,000 members in more than 95 countries. 

A virtual clinical trial of psychedelics to treat patients with disorders of consciousness




International team ran a “virtual clinical trial” of psychedelics on computer models of patients’ brains. These drugs could, in theory, push brain activity towards more flexible, conscious-like dynamics in some patients with disorders of consciousness




University of Liège

Cover image of issue 11 of Advanced Science. 

image: 

Cover image of issue 11 of Advanced Science.

view more 

Credit: ULiège/N.Alnagger





Researchers from the University of Liège and international collaborators developed a “virtual clinical trial” exploring a unique pharmacological treatment in patients who do not fully regain consciousness after a coma. The proposed treatment involves employing psychedelic drugs, such as psilocybin and lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) that have intense, consciousness-altering effects in healthy volunteers. Those remarkable experiences are thought to be linked with increased dynamical complexity of brain activity.  In patients with disorders of consciousness (DoC), dynamic brain function is importantly reduced, potentially resulting in decreased consciousness. Therefore, the proposed treatment effects hinge upon the premise that a short-term increase in the complexity of brain activity in patients could result in improvements in the conscious state of these patients.

Performing clinical trials with psychedelic drugs is burdened with legal obstacles and necessitates careful planning and ethical considerations. However, in the study by Alnagger et al., published in Advanced Science, the authors innovatively utilised personalised computational models of patients’ brains, built from individual MRI scans (functional MRI and diffusion-weighted imaging). After constructing a computational model of each patient’s brain, they simulated the effects of LSD and psilocybin as would be performed in a clinical trial, yet virtually. The researchers demonstrated that these substances could shift brain activity in patiens with DoC towards healthier, more flexible and complex dynamics.

To study the dynamics of simulated brain activity, the authors observed how an artificial perturbation was integrated into the brain’s activity in time and magnitude. “In order to understand any dynamical system, in this case the brain, it’s often useful to perturb it” said Naji Alnagger, first author, PhD candidate of the Coma Science Group“Imagine if you want to understand how viscous a liquid is, in other words, its dynamics, you could poke it. By observing how it reacts to the perturbation, how long it takes to return to baseline and the degree it is disturbed could reveal a lot of information as to the viscosity. The same is true here, observing how the model reacts after introducing an artificial perturbation can tell us about the nature of dynamics of the brain activity.”

The researchers first validated this method of simulated perturbations by showing that the response to perturbation was lower in states of lower consciousness such as DoC patients and healthy participants under anaesthesia compared to normal waking consciousness. They then showed that under psychedelics, perturbation induces an even greater response than in healthy individuals without the drug.

The researchers found that simulating LSD and psilocybin on patients with DoC boosted their responses to perturbations. The effect was greater in patients with some minimal signs of non-reflex behaviour (minimally conscious state) compared to patients with no detectable signs of clinical awareness (unresponsive wakefulness syndrome). Stratifying by these two diagnostic groups, the researchers also found that the simulated treatment effect was more correlated with the strength of the brain structural connectivity in the UWS patients, and with the strength of the brain functional connectivity in the MCS patients. “What was particularly noteworthy was that the MCS and UWS patients have the same level of structural connectivity strength, what differed was the efficiency of the existing connectivity, therefore it seems that, not only connectivity strength but efficient organisation was critical in sustaining the psychedelic related shifts in dynamics” said Dr. Jitka Annen, senior author and researcher at the University of Ghent.

“The results of the study suggest that if this treatment was to be carried out in real clinical settings, the type of patients who would most likely benefit would be an MCS patient with a strongly connected functional connectivity. This provides a starting point to target potential future clinical trials.” said Dr. Olivia Gosseries, director of the Coma Science Group.

Computational models offer a way to test treatments in silico, identify good potential candidates and investigate the mechanisms of a particular treatment. “This is an important proof of concept,” said Naji Alnagger. “While much more work is needed before any form of clinical application, this study shows how personalised computational modelling could one-day form a valuable part of pre-clinical work and personalised medicine.”

*The study was performed in collaboration with the University hospital of Liège (CHU de Liège), Imperial College London, Maastricht University, Sorbonne University, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, and other international partners.

 

Bats consume pest insects over intensively managed agricultural areas – if there are sufficient natural habitats nearby




Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW)
A common noctule (Nyctalus noctula) with a miniaturised transmitter 

image: 

A common noctule (Nyctalus noctula) with a miniaturised transmitter

view more 

Credit: Jon A. Juarez





Bats such as the common noctule consume pest insects over intensively managed arable land and thereby support sustainable agriculture. A new study led by scientists from the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (Leibniz-IZW) and the University of Potsdam shows that 23 percent of the insect species consumed by common noctules in north-eastern Germany are pests. Yet, agriculture can only benefit from this free service provided by bats if there are sufficient near-natural habitats in the vicinity of agricultural land. This is where common noctules hunt disproportionately often; only in combination with near-natural habitats can bats find sufficient prey in an intensively farmed landscape, according to the scientists in a paper just published in the journal “Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment”.

Over a period of three years, the team equipped a total of 128 common noctules (Nyctalus noctula) in the Uckermark district in north-eastern Germany with miniaturised transmitters and used an automated radio tracking system to follow the bats’ movements during their foraging flights. The intensively farmed landscape in the Uckermark is dotted with small natural habitats such as grasslands, woodlands, water bodies, and wetlands of varying sizes. Although these make up less than 5 percent of the total area, the scientists assumed that they are crucial for the bats as foraging habitat. To determine the composition of the bats’ diet, the team used the method of metabarcoding, which allows the insects consumed to be identified from the remains of insect DNA in bat faeces.

Bats prefer natural habitats when hunting – and often feed on insects that are harmful to agriculture

The analysis of the bats‘ movements shows that common noctules do not use the habitats in the landscape proportionally to the abundance of these habitats.: 55 percent of the foraging locations were recorded in this habitat. All other habitats, such as water bodies (14 percent), settlements (14 percent), grassland (10 percent) and forest (9 percent), were visited much less frequently during foraging. “However, if we compare the proportionate habitat use with how frequently this habitat type occurs in the landscape, it becomes clear that bats only visit agricultural areas out of necessity and clearly prefer other landscape types,” explains Marit Kelling, lead author of the paper and PhD student at the Leibniz-IZW and the University of Potsdam. Agricultural land accounts for almost 95 percent of the area around the bats’ daytime roosts, while wooded areas and water bodies, for example, each cover only about 0.5 percent of the area. The common noctules therefore make disproportionate use of the small remnants of near-natural landscape, presumably because they find food there much more reliably.

Because intensively used agricultural land is the dominant habitat type in the Uckermark region, common noctules still hunt most frequently over these areas. “We classified the flights into commuting and foraging based on their characteristics and found that 55 percent of foraging flights still take place over farmland – which also means that a significant portion of the bats’ prey is consumed there”, says Kelling. The team identified 295 different insect species in the bats’ faeces, an average of 11 different species per sample. 23 percent of the identified insect species – 67 species – are known to be harmful insects: 28 as agricultural pests, 20 as silvicultural pests and 19 as nuisance insects that can potentially transmit diseases. Agricultural pests such as the common cockchafer (Melolontha melolontha), the European crane fly (Tipula paludosa) and the summer chafer (Amphimallon solstitiale) were found most frequently in the samples, on average almost 1.5 times per sample.

Small natural habitats – big impact on wildlife and agriculture

“The observed foraging behaviour of common noctules shows how valuable it is to preserve even small, near-natural habitats within intensively used agricultural landscapes”, says Prof. Dr Christian Voigt, head of the Department of Evolutionary Ecology at the Leibniz-IZW, professor for Evolutionary Ecology at the Institute of Biochemistry and Biology at the University of Potsdam and senior author of the paper. “The bats avoid agricultural land, yet they most frequently feed on insects there. Their strong preference for small remnants of near-natural grasslands or water bodies when foraging suggests that they find food there more reliably. Only in combination with these near-natural habitats can the bats find sufficient prey insects, as the insect biomass over agricultural areas is generally lower owing to the use of pesticides.” The preservation of these habitats, for example at glacial kettle holes in the Uckermark, therefore not only contributes to bat conservation, but is also of great importance for the preservation of the services provided by bats in consuming pest insects.  Near-natural habitats in an agricultural landscape thus promote sustainable agriculture.

A common noctule (Nyctalus noctula) with a miniaturised transmitter

Credit

Viktoria Pezzei

 

Greener cryptocurrencies are less volatile as they react less to energy price movements




University of Vaasa
Davide Sandretto 

image: 

Davide Sandretto

view more 

Credit: Photo: University of Vaasa





The sharp swings in global energy markets are directly reflected in cryptocurrencies and can explain part of their volatility. Davide Sandretto’s cotutelle dissertation at the University of Vaasa and the University of Turin finds that greener, energy-efficient cryptocurrencies respond more steadily to market movements. However, significant risks persist, highlighting the need for effective risk-mitigation tools.

Davide Sandretto's doctoral dissertation in finance shows that traditional trading strategies used in equity markets often do not perform well in the crypto context. The research highlights mechanisms that can help investors navigate this uncertainty. One major finding relates to the environmental impact of different cryptocurrencies.

– We found that more environmentally friendly cryptocurrencies, such as those that transitioned from the Proof-of-Work to the Proof-of-Stake protocol, react less to energy shocks, says Sandretto.

The Proof-of-Work protocol used by Bitcoin among others, requires massive amounts of energy, making the asset's value highly sensitive to shocks in energy prices.

– Volatility is lower because the currencies that made this transition become less exposed to fluctuations in energy markets. It's a win-win for the environment and for the investor, who faces fewer risks from sudden energy price shocks, Sandretto notes.

Investors must understand the complex market

The dissertation also explores enhanced trading strategies that can help investors manage volatility by timing the market. This guidance is useful for asset managers and regulators looking to make more informed decisions in this diverse and complex asset class. 

– What stood out to me was the heterogeneity of cryptocurrencies’ functions. Bitcoin represents only one category, while many other projects, such as those enabling smart contracts, operate in very different ways, Sandretto explains.

Given the high risks and complexity, Sandretto's main advice for those interested in investing is to be cautious and informed.

– I would never recommend putting all your savings into cryptocurrencies. A small allocation can support diversification and improve the risk–return profile of a portfolio, but only if you understand the risks and the project behind each coin, Sandretto advises.

Dissertation

Sandretto, Davide (2025) Essays on Financial Innovations: Expected Returns and Volatility in the Cryptocurrency Market. Acta Wasaensia 572. Doctoral dissertation. University of Vaasa.

Publication PDF

Public defence

The public examination of M.Sc. Davide Sandretto’s doctoral dissertation “Essays on Financial Innovations: Expected Returns and Volatility in the Cryptocurrency Market” will be held on Monday 1 December 2025 at 11:00 (UTC+2) in Turin, Italy (University of Turin, School of Management and Economics, Room "O. Volpatto"). The defence is organised in Cotutelle co-operation with the University of Turin, Italy. 
It is possible to participate in the defence online.

Professor Jonathan Williams (University of Surrey, United Kingdom), Professor Enzo Scannella (Universitá di Palermo, Italy) and Associate Professor Heikki Lehkonen (University of Jyväskylä, Finland) will act as opponents and Associate Professor Klaus Grobys (University of Vaasa, Finland) as custos.

Further information

Davide Sandretto was born in 1998 in Turin, Italy. He completed a Master’s degree in Corporate Finance and Financial Markets at the University of Turin in 2022. Sandretto is currently a joint PhD student in finance at the University of Turin and the University of Vaasa.

 

Fishing for phages in Lund University’s Botanical Gardens




Lund University
Vasili Hauryliuk 

image: 

Vasili Hauryliuk

view more 

Credit: Kennet Ruona





Kompetensportalen, Lucat, Lupin, Lubas and LUCRIS. Those are the names of some of Lund University’s administrative systems. They are now also the names of five new bacteriophages that have recently been discovered in the ponds of Lund University’s Botanical Gardens.

Bacteriophages – often abbreviated to phages – are viruses that attack bacteria. Phages are astonishingly effective assassins – these viruses wipe out 20 percent of all bacteria on Earth every day. The ongoing battle with bacteria has made phages humanity’s natural ally when it comes to treating bacterial infections The growing urgency of combating antibiotic resistance has made phage research – particularly the development of phage-basered therapies – more relevant than ever.

“Bacteria are under constant attack from phages. Phages are picky about their prey – different phages infect different species of bacteria, sometimes only a specific strain. The challenge lies in assembling the right “collection” of phages, each one a precision weapon calibrated to infect and obliterate only the intended strain of bacteria,” says Vasili Hauryliuk, professor of medical biochemistry at Lund University.

Finding the right bacteriophage for the right bacterial strain is a major challenge. Natural bacterial strains are also constantly changing, thanks to mutations among other things. This means that a phage that has previously been effective may become ineffective.

At Lund University, Sweden’s first international course in phage biology has been completed. Doctoral students from across Europe came to attend lectures by leading phage researchers, exchange ideas, and, of course, to hunt for new phages and find the right precision weapons with which to attack various bacteria. Phages thrive wherever bacteria are found, which often means ponds and watercourses that are rich in organic material. The ponds in Lund University’s Botanical Gardens – both indoors and out – therefore proved to be perfect locations for phage fishing. However, to catch phages requires the right “bait”, which means the right bacterial strain to attract the virus.

“Collecting phages is like fishing in that you never know what you will end up with on the hook. Since it is fairly simple to isolate bacteriophages from ponds – and Lund has several – we combined research and education and went fishing for phages,” says Marcus Johansson, associate researcher at Lund University and one of the course coordinators. He is also last author on the study.

The researchers used a strain of E. coli, a common gut bacterium that can become a lethal pathogen. When a laboratory E. coli strain is grown in flasks without shaking, it becomes motile by developing a so-called flagellum – a “tail” that the bacterium uses to propel itself and explore the environment. Some phages specifically recognise the “tail” to infect. Using a motile E. coli strain, researchers managed to catch a new “tail-loving” phage from the Botanical Gardens’ ponds. Remarkably, this phage can kill not only E. coli, but also another motile bacterial species –Salmonella.

“One fun part about phage fishing is that you can name the new viruses – and phage names can be pretty weird! We wanted our phages to have names that were linked to Lund University and the tail-loving phage was named “Kompetensportalen”. We named two other phages Lucat and Lupin, after the University’s staff directory and its purchasing and invoicing tool, respectively” explains Vasili Hauryliuk.

The total of five newly-discovered bacteriophages from the Botanical Gardens are now serving as ambassadors for Lund University in the world of international phage research. The phage, “Kompetensportalen” has quickly attracted attention and phage researchers from outside Sweden have already expressed an interest in it.

“The diversity of bacteriophages discovered in the Botanical Gardens’ ponds is particularly fascinating as the Gardens’ greenhouses are currently being renovated. It underlines the great diversity in biology and our role as a centre for education and research. It is exciting to discover that our ponds are home to more than just plants,” says Allison Perrigo, director of Lund University’s Botanical Gardens.