from Google AI:
"Learning by osmosis" refers to an informal, passive absorption of knowledge, habits, or culture. In science and biology, chemical and electrical refer to the fundamental driving forces behind cellular transport.Chemical forces rely on concentration gradients (particles moving from high to low). Electrical forces rely on membrane potentials (charged particles moving toward opposite charges). Together, they form an electrochemical gradient.Chemical vs. Electrical in Cellular Transport
- Chemical Gradient: Driven by a difference in the amount of a substance. Molecules naturally diffuse from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration to achieve balance.
- Electrical Gradient: Driven by a difference in charge. Because cell interiors are typically negatively charged, positive ions (Na+, K+) are naturally attracted into the cell.
- Osmosis (Special Case): While diffusion moves any particle, osmosis refers exclusively to the movement of water (solvent) across a semipermeable barrier. Water moves toward the area with a higher solute concentration to equalize the concentrations on both sides.
Chemical vs. Electrical in the Brain (Synapses)In neuroscience, these concepts describe how neurons communicate:
- Chemical Synapses: Information is transferred between cells via the release of neurotransmitters (chemicals). This is the most common form of synaptic communication in the brain.
- Electrical Synapses: Cells are physically connected by gap junctions, allowing an electrical current (ions) to pass directly from one neuron to the next without a chemical intermediary.
"Learning by Osmosis" in Cognitive PsychologyWhile biological osmosis involves the physical movement of molecules across a membrane (or Markov Blanket), the phrase is used metaphorically in psychology to describe absorbing knowledge:
- Mechanism: It involves picking up nuances, office culture, or social behaviors by simply being immersed in a specific environment or observing peers.
- Real-World Context: Learning a language through native immersion or picking up technical skills by sitting near experts are classic examples of this.



