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And by a prudent flight and cunning save A life which valour could not, from the grave. A better buckler I can soon regain, But who can get another life again? Archilochus

Saturday, June 20, 2026

AI's Application to Creating Cellular LLMs based upon CRISPR Mods to RNA

Talk to Me, Baby!
Daddy Needs a Cure!

The Mechanical Decision Link: Biological Collective Intelligence (BCI) vs Artificial Collective Intelligence (ACI)

Paper: Decision Making in Light-Trapped Slime Molds Involves Active Mechanical Processes
Abstract: Decision-making is the process of selecting an action among alternatives, allowing biological and artificial systems to navigate complex environments and optimize behavior. While neural systems rely on neuron-based sensory processing and evaluation, decision-making also occurs in organisms without a centralized organizing unit, such as the unicellular slime mold Physarum polycephalum. Unlike neural systems, P. polycephalum relies on rhythmic peristaltic contractions to drive internal flows and redistribute mass, allowing it to adapt to its environment. However, while previous studies have focused on the outcomes of these decisions, the underlying mechanical principles that govern this mass relocation remain unknown. Here, we investigate the exploration process of P. polycephalum confined by blue light into polygonal shapes up to its escape. While the escape occurs along the longest axis of the polygons, independent of confinement shape, the exploration process prior to escape extends protrusions almost everywhere around a shape boundary. We find protrusions to align with the direction of peristaltic contraction waves driving mass relocation. Mapping out contraction modes during exploration in detail we observe an ongoing switching between different dominant principle contraction modes. Only over the course of time does the organism ultimately settle on the contraction mode most efficient for transport, which coincides with the escape. Thus, we find that only harsh environmental confinement triggers optimal behavior which is reached by long time reorganization of the flow patterns. Our findings provide insights into the mechanics of decision-making in non-neuronal organisms, shedding light on how decentralized systems process environmental constraints to drive adaptive behavior

Additional Info from Google AI:
Biological collective intelligence emerges from decentralized, living agents (like ant colonies, neural networks, or human societies) collaborating to solve complex problems. By contrast, artificial collective intelligence relies on interconnected machines, algorithms, or human-machine swarms that process massive datasets using centralized processing or multi-agent systems. [1, 2]
Key Differences at a Glance
Feature [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]Biological Collective IntelligenceArtificial Collective Intelligence
OriginEmerges naturally through evolution, social learning, and decentralized communication (e.g., pheromones, speech).Programmed or engineered using multi-agent systems, neural networks, and massive training datasets.
AdaptabilityHighly adaptable to unpredictable environments because control is distributed downward to the lowest level (e.g., individual cells or insects).Often relies on top-down, human-engineered structures. Adaptation usually requires retraining models or modifying algorithms.
ScalabilityNaturally scalable with low overhead, as each agent is largely autonomous and self-sufficient.Highly scalable in computational power, but requires immense energy resources and specialized hardware infrastructure.
EfficiencyExcellent at physical tasks, pattern recognition, and real-time environmental navigation despite limited individual cognitive power.Unmatched in processing speed, data aggregation, and structured logic, but often lacks real-world physical embodiment and context.
How They Compare
  • Adaptability & Resilience: Biological systems feature bottom-up architecture where individual parts are competent, self-organizing agents. This makes them resilient to localized failures, as there is no single point of failure. Artificial intelligence is often top-down and highly optimized for specific datasets, which can make it rigid or vulnerable when faced with entirely unprecedented, "out-of-distribution" scenarios. [1, 2]
  • The Human-Machine Synthesis: Collective intelligence increasingly overlaps through Hybrid Swarm Intelligence. Platforms utilizing real-time human-AI collaboration aim to merge the computational speed of artificial networks with the intuition, empathy, and context of human collectives.

Leonard Susskind on Relativity and Quantum Physics