Fitness Value of Subjective Information for Living Organisms

Published: 28 Oct 2024, Last Modified: 07 May 2026CrossrefEveryoneRevisionsCC BY-SA 4.0
Abstract: Information theory can be used to describe the gain of evolutionary fitness that an organism obtains from sensing, processing, and acting on environmental information. This paper considers the fitness value of subjective information, i.e., the context-dependent value of different kinds of information. A simplified model is given in which the organism requires two essential nutrients, and can prioritize sensing for one or the other. It is shown that a subjective strategy, in which the organism prioritizes a less abundant nutrient for sensing, leads to higher fitness than a balanced strategy, in which total information is maximized and the meaning of the acquired information is disregarded. Using this model, the fitness advantage of subjective information admits an analytical solution, and it is shown that subjective information is more advantageous when the organism's knowledge of the environment is less precise.
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