keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26227538/on-the-possible-quantum-role-of-serotonin-in-consciousness
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lucio Tonello, Massimo Cocchi, Fabio Gabrielli, Jack A Tuszynski
Cell membrane's fatty acids (FAs) have been carefully investigated in neurons and platelets in order to study a possible connection to psychopathologies. An important link between the FA distribution and membrane dynamics appears to emerge with the cytoskeleton dynamics. Microtubules (MTs) in particular have been implicated in some recent quantum consciousness models and analyses. The recently proposed quantum model of Craddock et al. (2014) states that MTs possess structural and functional characteristics that are consistent with collective quantum coherent excitations in the aromatic groups of their tryptophan residues...
September 2015: Journal of Integrative Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25912536/understanding-schizophrenia-as-a-disorder-of-consciousness-biological-correlates-and-translational-implications-from-quantum-theory-perspectives
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ganesan Venkatasubramanian
From neurophenomenological perspectives, schizophrenia has been conceptualized as "a disorder with heterogeneous manifestations that can be integrally understood to involve fundamental perturbations in consciousness". While these theoretical constructs based on consciousness facilitate understanding the 'gestalt' of schizophrenia, systematic research to unravel translational implications of these models is warranted. To address this, one needs to begin with exploration of plausible biological underpinnings of "perturbed consciousness" in schizophrenia...
April 30, 2015: Clinical Psychopharmacology and Neuroscience: the Official Scientific Journal of the Korean College of Neuropsychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25714379/anesthetics-act-in-quantum-channels-in-brain-microtubules-to-prevent-consciousness
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Travis J A Craddock, Stuart R Hameroff, Ahmed T Ayoub, Mariusz Klobukowski, Jack A Tuszynski
The mechanism by which anesthetic gases selectively prevent consciousness and memory (sparing non-conscious brain functions) remains unknown. At the turn of the 20(th) century Meyer and Overton showed that potency of structurally dissimilar anesthetic gas molecules correlated precisely over many orders of magnitude with one factor, solubility in a non-polar, 'hydrophobic' medium akin to olive oil. In the 1980s Franks and Lieb showed anesthetics acted in such a medium within proteins, suggesting post-synaptic membrane receptors...
2015: Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25012713/keeping-time-could-quantum-beating-in-microtubules-be-the-basis-for-the-neural-synchrony-related-to-consciousness
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Travis J A Craddock, Avner Priel, Jack A Tuszynski
This paper discusses the possibility of quantum coherent oscillations playing a role in neuronal signaling. Consciousness correlates strongly with coherent neural oscillations, however the mechanisms by which neurons synchronize are not fully elucidated. Recent experimental evidence of quantum beats in light-harvesting complexes of plants (LHCII) and bacteria provided a stimulus for seeking similar effects in important structures found in animal cells, especially in neurons. We argue that microtubules (MTs), which play critical roles in all eukaryotic cells, possess structural and functional characteristics that are consistent with quantum coherent excitations in the aromatic groups of their tryptophan residues...
June 2014: Journal of Integrative Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25012711/quantum-effects-in-the-understanding-of-consciousness
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stuart R Hameroff, Travis J A Craddock, Jack A Tuszynski
This paper presents a historical perspective on the development and application of quantum physics methodology beyond physics, especially in biology and in the area of consciousness studies. Quantum physics provides a conceptual framework for the structural aspects of biological systems and processes via quantum chemistry. In recent years individual biological phenomena such as photosynthesis and bird navigation have been experimentally and theoretically analyzed using quantum methods building conceptual foundations for quantum biology...
June 2014: Journal of Integrative Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24454909/spatiotemporal-imaging-of-glutamate-induced-biophotonic-activities-and-transmission-in-neural-circuits
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rendong Tang, Jiapei Dai
The processing of neural information in neural circuits plays key roles in neural functions. Biophotons, also called ultra-weak photon emissions (UPE), may play potential roles in neural signal transmission, contributing to the understanding of the high functions of nervous system such as vision, learning and memory, cognition and consciousness. However, the experimental analysis of biophotonic activities (emissions) in neural circuits has been hampered due to technical limitations. Here by developing and optimizing an in vitro biophoton imaging method, we characterize the spatiotemporal biophotonic activities and transmission in mouse brain slices...
2014: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24259348/quantum-walks-in-brain-microtubules-a-biomolecular-basis-for-quantum-cognition
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stuart Hameroff
Cognitive decisions are best described by quantum mathematics. Do quantum information devices operate in the brain? What would they look like? Fuss and Navarro () describe quantum lattice registers in which quantum superpositioned pathways interact (compute/integrate) as 'quantum walks' akin to Feynman's path integral in a lattice (e.g. the 'Feynman quantum chessboard'). Simultaneous alternate pathways eventually reduce (collapse), selecting one particular pathway in a cognitive decision, or choice. This paper describes how quantum walks in a Feynman chessboard are conceptually identical to 'topological qubits' in brain neuronal microtubules, as described in the Penrose-Hameroff 'Orch OR' theory of consciousness...
January 2014: Topics in Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24070914/consciousness-in-the-universe-a-review-of-the-orch-or-theory
#28
REVIEW
Stuart Hameroff, Roger Penrose
The nature of consciousness, the mechanism by which it occurs in the brain, and its ultimate place in the universe are unknown. We proposed in the mid 1990's that consciousness depends on biologically 'orchestrated' coherent quantum processes in collections of microtubules within brain neurons, that these quantum processes correlate with, and regulate, neuronal synaptic and membrane activity, and that the continuous Schrödinger evolution of each such process terminates in accordance with the specific Diósi-Penrose (DP) scheme of 'objective reduction' ('OR') of the quantum state...
March 2014: Physics of Life Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23673035/quantum-mathematical-cognition-requires-quantum-brain-biology-the-orch-or-theory
#29
COMMENT
Stuart R Hameroff
The "Orch OR" theory suggests that quantum computations in brain neuronal dendritic-somatic microtubules regulate axonal firings to control conscious behavior. Within microtubule subunit proteins, collective dipoles in arrays of contiguous amino acid electron clouds enable "quantum channels" suitable for topological dipole "qubits" able to physically represent cognitive values, for example, those portrayed by Pothos & Busemeyer (P&B) as projections in abstract Hilbert space.
June 2013: Behavioral and Brain Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23091452/how-quantum-brain-biology-can-rescue-conscious-free-will
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stuart Hameroff
Conscious "free will" is problematic because (1) brain mechanisms causing consciousness are unknown, (2) measurable brain activity correlating with conscious perception apparently occurs too late for real-time conscious response, consciousness thus being considered "epiphenomenal illusion," and (3) determinism, i.e., our actions and the world around us seem algorithmic and inevitable. The Penrose-Hameroff theory of "orchestrated objective reduction (Orch OR)" identifies discrete conscious moments with quantum computations in microtubules inside brain neurons, e...
2012: Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22925839/consciousness-biology-and-quantum-hypotheses
#31
REVIEW
Bernard J Baars, David B Edelman
Natural phenomena are reducible to quantum events in principle, but quantum mechanics does not always provide the best level of analysis. The many-body problem, chaotic avalanches, materials properties, biological organisms, and weather systems are better addressed at higher levels. Animals are highly organized, goal-directed, adaptive, selectionist, information-preserving, functionally redundant, multicellular, quasi-autonomous, highly mobile, reproducing, dissipative systems that conserve many fundamental features over remarkably long periods of time at the species level...
September 2012: Physics of Life Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22899055/insights-into-plant-consciousness-from-neuroscience-physics-and-mathematics-a-role-for-quasicrystals
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John Gardiner
There is considerable debate over whether plants are conscious and this, indeed, is an important question. Here I look at developments in neuroscience, physics and mathematics that may impact on this question. Two major concomitants of consciousness in animals are microtubule function and electrical gamma wave synchrony. Both these factors may also play a role in plant consciousness. I show that plants possess aperiodic quasicrystal structures composed of ribosomes that may enable quantum computing, which has been suggested to lie at the core of animal consciousness...
September 1, 2012: Plant Signaling & Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22794497/increased-levels-of-serum-map-2-at-6-months-correlate-with-improved-outcome-in-survivors-of-severe-traumatic-brain-injury
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stefania Mondello, Andrea Gabrielli, Sheila Catani, Mariagrazia D'Ippolito, Andreas Jeromin, Antonio Ciaramella, Paola Bossù, Kara Schmid, Frank Tortella, Kevin K W Wang, Ronald L Hayes, Rita Formisano
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate microtubule-associated proteins (MAP-2), a dendritic marker of both acute damage and chronic neuronal regeneration after injury, in serum of survivors after severe TBI and examine the association with long-term outcome. METHODS: Serum concentrations of MAP-2 were evaluated in 16 patients with severe TBI (Glasgow Coma Scale score [GCS] ≤ 8) 6 months post-injury and in 16 controls. Physical and cognitive outcomes were assessed, using the Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended (GOSE) and Levels of Cognitive Functioning Scale (LCFS), respectively...
2012: Brain Injury
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22664271/transcranial-ultrasound-tus-effects-on-mental-states-a-pilot-study
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stuart Hameroff, Michael Trakas, Chris Duffield, Emil Annabi, M Bagambhrini Gerace, Patrick Boyle, Anthony Lucas, Quinlan Amos, Annemarie Buadu, John J Badal
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: Transcranial ultrasound (TUS) can modulate brain function. To assess possible TUS modulation of mental states, we investigated effects on subjective reports of pain and mood of sub-thermal TUS versus placebo applied to frontal scalp and brain of chronic pain patient volunteers. METHODS: With IRB approval and informed consent, subjects with chronic pain completed two visual analog scales for pain (NRS) and mood (VAMS/Global Affect), and their vital signs were recorded 10 min prior to, and 10 min and 40 min following exposure to either subthermal TUS (8 MHz) or placebo (in a double blind crossover study) using the 12L-RS probe of a LOGIQe ultrasound imaging machine (General Electric, USA)...
May 2013: Brain Stimulation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22626532/a-mean-field-ising-model-for-cortical-rotation-in-amphibian-one-cell-stage-embryos
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jack A Tuszynski, Richard Gordon
We propose a new physical mechanism of cortical rotation generation in one-cell embryos of amphibians based on a phase transition in the ensemble of microtubules localized to the cortical region of the cell interior. Microtubules, protein polymers formed from tubulin heterodimers, are highly negatively charged, which results in strong electrostatic interactions over tens of nanometers, even in the presence of counterions that partially screen electrostatic interactions. A simplified model that offers a plausible representation of these effects is based on the Ising Hamiltonian, which has been robustly applied to explain a wide range of order-disorder transitions in physics, chemistry and other sciences...
September 2012: Bio Systems
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21635328/the-brain-is-both-neurocomputer-and-quantum-computer
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stuart R Hameroff
In their article, Is the Brain a Quantum Computer,? Litt, Eliasmith, Kroon, Weinstein, and Thagard (2006) criticize the Penrose-Hameroff "Orch OR" quantum computational model of consciousness, arguing instead for neurocomputation as an explanation for mental phenomena. Here I clarify and defend Orch OR, show how Orch OR and neurocomputation are compatible, and question whether neurocomputation alone can physiologically account for coherent gamma synchrony EEG, a candidate for the neural correlate of consciousness...
November 12, 2007: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21227102/-funda-mentality-is-the-conscious-mind-subtly-linked-to-a-basic-level-of-the-universe
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
S R Hameroff
Age-old battle lines over the puzzling nature of mental experience are shaping a modern resurgence in the study of consciousness. On one side are the long-dominant `physicalists' who view consciousness as an emergent property of the brain's neural networks. On the alternative, rebellious side are those who see a necessary added ingredient: proto-conscious experience intrinsic to reality, perhaps understandable through modern physics (panpsychists, pan-experientialists, `funda-mentalists'). It is argued here that the physicalist premise alone is unable to solve completely the difficult issues of consciousness and that to do so will require supplemental panpsychist/pan-experiential philosophy expressed in modern physics...
April 1, 1998: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20589953/matching-and-selection-of-a-specific-subjective-experience-conjugate-matching-and-experience
#38
REVIEW
Ram Lakhan Pandey Vimal
We incorporate the dual-mode concept in our dual-aspect PE-SE (proto-experience-subjective experience) framework. The two modes are: (1) the non-tilde mode that is the physical (material) and mental aspect of cognition (memory and attention) related feedback signals in a neural-network, which refers to the cognitive nearest past approaching towards present; and (2) the tilde mode that is the material and mental aspect of the feed-forward signals due to external environmental input and internal endogenous input, which pertains to the nearest future approaching towards present and is a entropy-reversed representation of non-tilde mode...
June 2010: Journal of Integrative Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20589950/microtubule-ionic-conduction-and-its-implications-for-higher-cognitive-functions
#39
REVIEW
Travis J A Craddock, Jack A Tuszynski, Avner Priel, Holly Freedman
The neuronal cytoskeleton has been hypothesized to play a role in higher cognitive functions including learning, memory and consciousness. Experimental evidence suggests that both microtubules and actin filaments act as biological electrical wires that can transmit and amplify electric signals via the flow of condensed ion clouds. The potential transmission of electrical signals via the cytoskeleton is of extreme importance to the electrical activity of neurons in general. In this regard, the unique structure, geometry and electrostatics of microtubules are discussed with the expected impact on their specific functions within the neuron...
June 2010: Journal of Integrative Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20060422/cholinergic-systems-mediate-action-from-movement-to-higher-consciousness
#40
REVIEW
Nancy J Woolf, Larry L Butcher
There is a fundamental link between cholinergic neurotransmitter function and overt and covert actions. Major cholinergic systems include peripheral motor neurons organizing skeletal muscle movements into overt behaviors and cholinergic neurons in the basal forebrain and mesopontine regions that mediate covert actions realized as states of consciousness, arousal, selective attention, perception, and memory. Cholinergic interneurons in the striatum appear to integrate conscious and unconscious actions. Neural network models involving cholinergic neurons, as well as neurons using other neurotransmitters, emphasize connective circuitry as being responsible for both motor programs and neural correlates of higher consciousness...
August 10, 2011: Behavioural Brain Research
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