journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38292024/audiovisual-interactions-outside-of-visual-awareness-during-motion-adaptation
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Minsun Park, Randolph Blake, Chai-Youn Kim
Motion aftereffects (MAEs), illusory motion experienced in a direction opposed to real motion experienced during prior adaptation, have been used to assess audiovisual interactions. In a previous study from our laboratory, we demonstrated that a congruent direction of auditory motion presented concurrently with visual motion during adaptation strengthened the consequent visual MAE, compared to when auditory motion was incongruent in direction. Those judgments of MAE strength, however, could have been influenced by expectations or response bias from mere knowledge of the state of audiovisual congruity during adaptation...
2024: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38046654/common-computations-for%C3%A2-metacognition-and%C3%A2-meta-metacognition
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yunxuan Zheng, Samuel Recht, Dobromir Rahnev
Recent evidence shows that people have the meta-metacognitive ability to evaluate their metacognitive judgments of confidence. However, it is unclear whether meta-metacognitive judgments are made by a different system and rely on a separate set of computations compared to metacognitive judgments. To address this question, we asked participants ( N  = 36) to perform a perceptual decision-making task and provide (i) an object-level, Type-1 response about the identity of the stimulus; (ii) a metacognitive, Type-2 response (low/high) regarding their confidence in their Type-1 decision; and (iii) a meta-metacognitive, Type-3 response (low/high) regarding the quality of their Type-2 rating...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38028727/special-issue-experiencing-well-beingplayfulness-and%C3%A2-the-meaningful-life-an-active-inference-perspective
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julian Kiverstein, Mark Miller
Our paper takes as its starting point the recent proposal, at the core of this special issue, to use the active inference framework (AIF) to computationally model what it is for a person to live a meaningful life. In broad brushstrokes, the AIF takes experiences of human flourishing to be the result of predictions and uncertainty estimations along many dimensions at multiple levels of neurobiological organization. Our aim in this paper is to explain how AIF models predict that uncertainty can sometimes, under the right conditions, be conducive to the experiences of flourishing...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38028726/modeling-and%C3%A2-controlling-the-body-in%C3%A2-maladaptive-ways-an-active-inference-perspective-on%C3%A2-non-suicidal-self-injury-behaviors
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Barca Laura, Domenico Maisto, Giovani Pezzulo
A significant number of persons engage in paradoxical behaviors, such as extreme food restriction (up to starvation) and non-suicidal self-injuries, especially during periods of rapid changes, such as adolescence. Here, we contextualize these and related paradoxical behavior within an active inference view of brain functions, which assumes that the brain forms predictive models of bodily variables, emotional experiences, and the embodied self and continuously strives to reduce the uncertainty of such models...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37810758/the-exclusionary-approach-to-consciousness
#25
REVIEW
Marlo Paßler
The standard approach in the field of consciousness research involves identifying the neural correlates of consciousness (NCCs) by comparing neural activity between conscious and unconscious trials. However, this method has been met with criticism due to the lack of consensus on how to operationalize and measure consciousness. In this paper, I propose an alternative approach: the exclusionary approach. Rather than utilizing near-threshold conditions to contrast conscious and unconscious trials, this approach leverages the widely accepted notion that subjective reports are reliable under normal conditions...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37711314/lifeworlds-in%C3%A2-pain-a-principled-method-for%C3%A2-investigation-and%C3%A2-intervention
#26
REVIEW
Abby Tabor, Axel Constant
The experience of pain spans biological, psychological and sociocultural realms, both basic and complex, it is by turns necessary and devastating. Despite an extensive knowledge of the constituents of pain, the ability to translate this into effective intervention remains limited. It is suggested that current, multiscale, medical approaches, largely informed by the biopsychosocial (BPS) model, attempt to integrate knowledge but are undermined by an epistemological obligation, one that necessitates a prior isolation of the constituent parts...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37711313/the-evolutionary-origins-of%C3%A2-the-global-neuronal-workspace-in%C3%A2-vertebrates
#27
REVIEW
Oryan Zacks, Eva Jablonka
The Global Neuronal Workspace theory of consciousness offers an explicit functional architecture that relates consciousness to cognitive abilities such as perception, attention, memory, and evaluation. We show that the functional architecture of the Global Neuronal Workspace, which is based mainly on human studies, corresponds to the cognitive-affective architecture proposed by the Unlimited Associative Learning theory that describes minimal consciousness. However, we suggest that when applied to basal vertebrates, both models require important modifications to accommodate what has been learned about the evolution of the vertebrate brain...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37635900/adversarial-inference-predictive-minds-in%C3%A2-the-attention-economy
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jelle Bruineberg
What is it about our current digital technologies that seemingly makes it difficult for users to attend to what matters to them? According to the dominant narrative in the literature on the "attention economy," a user's lack of attention is due to the large amounts of information available in their everyday environments. I will argue that information-abundance fails to account for some of the central manifestations of distraction, such as sudden urges to check a particular information-source in the absence of perceptual information...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37621984/modelling-perception-as-a-hierarchical-competition-differentiates-imagined-veridical-and%C3%A2-hallucinated-percepts
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexander A Sulfaro, Amanda K Robinson, Thomas A Carlson
Mental imagery is a process by which thoughts become experienced with sensory characteristics. Yet, it is not clear why mental images appear diminished compared to veridical images, nor how mental images are phenomenologically distinct from hallucinations, another type of non-veridical sensory experience. Current evidence suggests that imagination and veridical perception share neural resources. If so, we argue that considering how neural representations of externally generated stimuli (i.e. sensory input) and internally generated stimuli (i...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37560334/on-the-non-uniqueness-problem-in%C3%A2-integrated-information-theory
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jake R Hanson, Sara I Walker
Integrated Information Theory (IIT) 3.0 is among the leading theories of consciousness in contemporary neuroscience. The core of the theory relies on the calculation of a scalar mathematical measure of consciousness, Φ, which is inspired by the phenomenological axioms of the theory. Here, we show that despite its widespread application, Φ is not a well-defined mathematical concept in the sense that the value it specifies is non-unique. To demonstrate this, we introduce an algorithm that calculates all possible Φ values for a given system in strict accordance with the mathematical definition from the theory...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37424966/pattern-breaking-a-complex-systems-approach-to-psychedelic-medicine
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Inês Hipólito, Jonas Mago, Fernando E Rosas, Robin Carhart-Harris
Recent research has demonstrated the potential of psychedelic therapy for mental health care. However, the psychological experience underlying its therapeutic effects remains poorly understood. This paper proposes a framework that suggests psychedelics act as destabilizers, both psychologically and neurophysiologically. Drawing on the 'entropic brain' hypothesis and the 'RElaxed Beliefs Under pSychedelics' model, this paper focuses on the richness of psychological experience. Through a complex systems theory perspective, we suggest that psychedelics destabilize fixed points or attractors, breaking reinforced patterns of thinking and behaving...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37342236/the-self-simulational-theory-of%C3%A2-temporal-extension
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jan Erik Bellingrath
Subjective experience is experience in time. Unfolding in a continuous river of moments, our experience, however, consists not only in the changing phenomenological content per se but, further, in additional retrodiction and prospection of the moments that immediately preceded and followed it. It is in this way that William James's 'specious present' presents itself as extending between the past and future. While the phenomenology of temporality always happens, in normal waking states, to someone , and the notions of self-representation and temporal experience have continuously been associated with each other, there has not yet been an explicit account of their relationship...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37342235/about-the-compatibility-between-the-perturbational-complexity-index-and%C3%A2-the-global-neuronal-workspace-theory-of%C3%A2-consciousness
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michele Farisco, Jean-Pierre Changeux
This paper investigates the compatibility between the theoretical framework of the global neuronal workspace theory (GNWT) of conscious processing and the perturbational complexity index (PCI). Even if it has been introduced within the framework of a concurrent theory (i.e. Integrated Information Theory), PCI appears, in principle, compatible with the main tenet of GNWT, which is a conscious process that depends on a long-range connection between different cortical regions, more specifically on the amplification, global propagation, and integration of brain signals...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37275559/when-do-parts-form-wholes-integrated-information-as-the-restriction-on-mereological-composition
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kelvin J McQueen, Naotsugu Tsuchiya
Under what conditions are material objects, such as particles, parts of a whole object? This is the composition question and is a longstanding open question in philosophy. Existing attempts to specify a non-trivial restriction on composition tend to be vague and face serious counterexamples. Consequently, two extreme answers have become mainstream: composition (the forming of a whole by its parts) happens under no or all conditions. In this paper, we provide a self-contained introduction to the integrated information theory (IIT) of consciousness...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37205987/separating-weak-integrated-information-theory-into-inspired-and-aspirational-approaches
#35
REVIEW
Angus Leung, Naotsugu Tsuchiya
Mediano et al. (The strength of weak integrated information theory. Trends Cogn Sci 2022; 26 : 646-55.) separate out strong and weak flavours of the integrated information theory (IIT) of consciousness. They describe 'strong IIT' as attempting to derive a universal formula for consciousness and 'weak IIT' as searching for empirically measurable correlates of aspects of consciousness. We put forward that their overall notion of 'weak IIT' may be too weak. Rather, it should be separated out to distinguish 'aspirational-IIT', which aims to empirically test IIT by making trade-offs to its proposed measures, and 'IIT-inspired' approaches, which adopt high-level ideas of IIT while dropping the mathematical framework it reaches through its introspective, first-principles approach to consciousness...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37205986/exploring-the-role-of-structuralist-methodology-in-the-neuroscience-of-consciousness-a-defense-and-analysis
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lukas Kob
Traditional contrastive analysis has been the foundation of consciousness science, but its limitations due to the lack of a reliable method for measuring states of consciousness have prompted the exploration of alternative approaches. Structuralist theories have gained attention as an alternative that focuses on the structural properties of phenomenal experience and seeks to identify their neural encoding via structural similarities between quality spaces and neural state spaces. However, the intertwining of philosophical assumptions about structuralism and structuralist methodology may pose a challenge to those who are skeptical of the former...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37114163/nonlinear-brain-correlates-of-trait-self-boundarylessness
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lena Lindström, Philippe Goldin, Johan Mårtensson, Etzel Cardeña
Alterations of the sense of self induced by meditation include an increased sense of boundarylessness. In this study, we investigated behavioural and functional magnetic resonance imaging correlates of trait self-boundarylessness during resting state and the performance of two experimental tasks. We found that boundarylessness correlated with greater self-endorsement of words related to fluidity and with longer response times in a math task. Boundarylessness also correlated negatively with brain activity in the posterior cingulate cortex/precuneus during mind-wandering compared to a task targeting a minimal sense of self...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37089451/towards-causal-mechanisms-of-consciousness-through-focused-transcranial-brain-stimulation
#38
REVIEW
Marek Havlík, Jaroslav Hlinka, Monika Klírová, Petr Adámek, Jiří Horáček
Conscious experience represents one of the most elusive problems of empirical science, namely neuroscience. The main objective of empirical studies of consciousness has been to describe the minimal sets of neural events necessary for a specific neuronal state to become consciously experienced. The current state of the art still does not meet this objective but rather consists of highly speculative theories based on correlates of consciousness and an ever-growing list of knowledge gaps. The current state of the art is defined by the limitations of past stimulation techniques and the emphasis on the observational approach...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37089450/challenging-the-fixed-criterion-model-of-perceptual-decision-making
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer Laura Lee, Rachel Denison, Wei Ji Ma
Perceptual decision-making is often conceptualized as the process of comparing an internal decision variable to a categorical boundary or criterion. How the mind sets such a criterion has been studied from at least two perspectives. One idea is that the criterion is a fixed quantity. In work on subjective phenomenology, the notion of a fixed criterion has been proposed to explain a phenomenon called "subjective inflation"-a form of metacognitive mismatch in which observers overestimate the quality of their sensory representation in the periphery or at unattended locations...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37063786/describing-and-explaining-consciousness
#40
REVIEW
Bjørn Grinde
Consciousness is a property of advanced brains and as such a biological feature. Explaining biological features is somewhat different from explaining physical phenomena; in the former case, the key is to first define its functional role (the reason why it was selected) and then to outline the evolutionary trajectory leading to its presence. In the case of consciousness, there are reasonable models for both. Further research is required to substantiate these models, but they offer, arguably, the best explanatory framework...
2023: Neuroscience of Consciousness
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