Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of RNA Archaeology Instituto de Parasitología y Biomedicina ‘López‐Neyra’ (CSIC) Granada Spain
2. Centro de Biología Molecular ‘Severo Ochoa’ (CSIC‐UAM) Madrid Spain
3. Department of Molecular Evolution Centro de Astrobiología (CSIC–INTA) Madrid Spain
4. Department of Clinical Microbiology IIS‐Fundación Jiménez Díaz, UAM Madrid Spain
Abstract
AbstractInformation concepts from physics, mathematics and computer science support many areas of research in biology. Their focus is on objective information, which provides correlations and patterns related to objects, processes, marks and signals. In these approaches only the quantitative aspects of the meaning of the information is relevant. In other areas of biology, ‘meaningful information’, which is subjective in nature, relies on the physiology of the organism's sensory organs and on the interpretation of the perceived signals, which is then translated into action, even if this is only mental (in brained animals). Information is involved, in terms of both amount and quality. Here we contextualize and review the main theories that deal with ‘meaningful‐information’ at a molecular level from different areas of natural language research, namely biosemiotics, code‐biology, biocommunication and biohermeneutics. As this information mediates between the organism and its environment, we emphasize how such theories compare with the neo‐Darwinian treatment of genetic information, and how they project onto the rapid evolution of RNA viruses.
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Funder
Agencia Estatal de Investigación
Cited by
2 articles.
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