Peter Lang

Deleuze and Biosemiotics Peter Lang The aim of this paper is to establish a clear link between biosemiotics and Deleuzean philosophy. This can be done by highlighting the affinity in Deleuze’s work to theories of autopoiesis and organic/biophysical sense-making. A compelling through-line can be drawn between Deleuze, theories of living systems, and biosemiotics in the […]

Rebeca Méndez-Veras & Òscar Castro

Biosemiotics as a theoretical framework to approach the human gut-microbiota-brain-axis Rebeca Méndez-Veras & Òscar Castro The human brain has approximately 86-100 billion neurons; however, the enteric nervous system has an estimated 200 million neurons, which is why our gut is called the “second brain”. Both systems connect through several sensors, microbes, and cells (Sarkar et […]

Mariana Vitti Rodrigues, Claus Emmeche & Henrik Nielsen

Protein language models and the semiotic language of Signal Peptides Mariana Vitti Rodrigues, Claus Emmeche & Henrik Nielsen Are language models learning to read the language of nature? This communication explores the learning potential of applying automated methods to predict signal peptides using protein language models. Signal Peptides (SP) are short amino acid sequences whose […]

Paul Cobley

Does Biosemiotics Need a Theory of Reading? Paul Cobley Central to biosemiotics is the process of interpretation, which takes place across all species of life. General semiotics has been enlivened by the concept of ‘the text’ and the concomitant act of ‘reading’ (Lotman 1964), with interpretation embedded in it. The term ‘reading’ clearly invokes a […]

Debbie Cole

Preliminary Connections with Semiotics in Linguistic Anthropology As a newcomer to the field of Biosemiotics, I find the Biosemiotics Glossary Project a fascinating example of intentional interdisciplinary and intercultural communication.  Linguists within anthropology have long worked on language contact, i.e. the emergence, maintenance, and evolution of new registers within their cultural contexts. The building of […]

Sigmund Ongstad

Structures of Animal Utterances Seen as Aesthetics – and as Communication. Semiotic perspectives on functions of so-called animal beauty   Due to a dramatic increase of research in ethology and zoo-communication over the last decades biosemiotics has now access to an extensive amount of empirical studies of how and why animals structure their utterances. Research […]

Tommi Vehkavaara

Meaningfulness and applicability of semiotic concepts in biosemiotics The 1st Gatherings in biosemiotics was held 22 years ago in Copenhagen and the first sentence of its CFP proclaimed the intention “to establish a regular framework for discussions of biosemiotics in the context of biology”. I must have been taken that seriously, because without being biologist […]

Frederik Stjernfelt

Peirce’s ideas of the man-animal distinction Peirce was an evolutionist and one of the first to generalize the concept of evolution from biology to physics and sociology alike. He also took some interest in locating what it is that separates the human animal from other higher animals. As to biological instinct, it was the human […]

Julian Zubek & Joanna Rączaszek-Leonardi

A view on abstract concepts from an interaction-based perspective: An attempt at a semiotic analysis Most of the approaches to concepts, both in cognitive science and in artificial intelligence, are informed by information-processing views. Concepts are mapped to categories, which despite their fuzzy boundaries, graded structure and family resemblance (Rosch, 1973), are still mostly characterized […]

John Pickering

Extending Biosemiotics The Extended Evolutionary Synthesis also extends the role of biosemiotics. This paper will seek to extend it further, both to the metaphysics of C. S. Peirce and A. N Whitehead and to Ingold’s treatment of inheritance (Ingold, 2022). Firstness, experience without reaction, is fundamental to Peirce’s metaphysics, giving qualia an ontological status equivalent […]