Gandia, Antoni Adamatzky, Andrew
Published in
Communicative & Integrative Biology
Psilocybin fungi, aka “magic” mushrooms, are well known for inducing colorful and visionary states of mind. Such psychoactive properties and the ease of cultivating their basidiocarps within low-tech setups make psilocybin fungi promising pharmacological tools for mental health applications. Understanding of the intrinsic electrical patterns occurr...
Enespa, Chandra, Prem
Published in
Communicative & Integrative Biology
Microorganisms are present in the universe and they play role in beneficial and harmful to human life, society, and environments. Plant microbiome is a broad term in which microbes are present in the rhizo, phyllo, or endophytic region and play several beneficial and harmful roles with the plant. To know of these microorganisms, it is essential to ...
Peper, Abraham
Published in
Communicative & Integrative Biology
It is generally assumed that what we hear in our head is what we think and that, when we tell a thought to somebody else, the other person understands what our thought has been. This paper analyzes how we think and what happens when we communicate our thoughts verbally to others and to ourselves. The assumption that we become conscious in language ...
Lohrey, Andrew Boreham, Bruce
Published in
Communicative & Integrative Biology
We present a general discussion concerning the wholeness of what has been called infinite awareness, but here is called Omni-local consciousness. This model of consciousness has an interconnecting structure that has both local and nonlocal features, that is, the model contains local conscious human minds and locates them within an infinite (Omni) b...
Lesch, Raffaela Kotrschal, Kurt Kitchener, Andrew C. Fitch, W. Tecumseh Kotrschal, Alexander
Published in
Communicative & Integrative Biology
Morphological traits, such as white patches, floppy ears and curly tails, are ubiquitous in domestic animals and are referred to as the ‘domestication syndrome’. A commonly discussed hypothesis that has the potential to provide a unifying explanation for these traits is the ‘neural crest/domestication syndrome hypothesis’. Although this hypothesis ...
Kitagawa, Munenori Xu, Xiaosa Jackson, David
Published in
Communicative & integrative biology
Multicellular organisms use transcripts and proteins as signaling molecules for cell-to-cell communication. Maize KNOTTED1 (KN1) was the first homeodomain transcription factor identified in plants, and functions in maintaining shoot stem cells. KN1 acts non-cell autonomously, and both its messenger RNA (mRNA) and protein traffic between cells throu...
Mase, Hikari Nakagami, Hirofumi Okamoto, Takashi Takahashi, Taku Motose, Hiroyasu
Published in
Communicative & integrative biology
A NIMA-related protein kinase, MpNEK1, directs tip growth of rhizoids through microtubule depolymerization in a liverwort Marchantia polymorpha. The Mpnek1 knockouts were shown to develop curly and spiral rhizoids due to the fluctuated direction of growth. Still, physiological roles and mechanisms of MpNEK1-dependent rhizoid tip growth remain to be...
Volkov, Vadim
Published in
Communicative & Integrative Biology
The recent fast global spread of COVID-19 caused by a severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) questions why and how the disease managed to be so effective against existing health protection measures. These measures, developed by many countries over centuries and strengthened over the last decades, proved to be ineffective again...
Ghosh, Subrata Singh, Pushpendra Manna, Jhimli Saxena, Komal Sahoo, Pathik Krishnanda, Soami Daya Ray, Kanad Hill, Jonathan P Bandyopadhyay, Anirban
Published in
Communicative & integrative biology
In 1907, Lapicque proposed that an electric field passes through the neuronal membrane and transmits a signal. Subsequently, a "snake curve" or spike was used to depict the means by which a linear flat current undergoes a sudden Gaussian or Laplacian peak. This concept has been the accepted scenario for more than 115 years even appearing in textboo...
Agung Nugroho, Dwi Atmoko Sajuthi, Dondin Supraptini Mansjoer, Sri Iskandar, Entang Shalahudin Darusman, Huda
Published in
Communicative & integrative biology
The current study was designed to predict why human primates often behave unfairly (equity aversion) by not exhibiting equity preference (the ability to equally distribute outcomes 1:1 among participants). Parallel to humans, besides inequity aversion, lab monkeys such as kin of long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) also demonstrate equity ave...