Consciousness Flashcards

1
Q

What did Descartes propose about consciousness?

A

Dualism - it is independent of the physical world

There is something unique and important about the subjective nature of experience (my experience is unique and different to yours)

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2
Q

What did Shen (2019) find that contradicts Descartes view of consciousness?

A

AI over time can reconstruct what image is being shown to a participant based on the fMRI activity

Combines hierarchical neural representations to reconstruct perceptual and subjective images - consciousness?

(Thus NOT independent)

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3
Q

What was John Searles philosophical view of consciouness?

A

There is something special to it so you cannot just boil it down to computational rules

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4
Q

What evidence is there to contradict Searle’s view?

A

Markram (2015) reconstructed a rat’s cortical network using AI - simulate consciousness?

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5
Q

What evidence contradicts the theory that consciousness is unique to the subjective nature of experience?

A

▪️ Rats connected by electrode - one responds to what the other has seen
▪️ Conjoined twins - shared subjectivity/consciousness? (e.g., shared thalamus so can feel what each other feel)

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6
Q

What can we do unconsciously?

A

▪️ Regulate HR, breathing, temperature…
▪️ Learning? (repeated work under anaesthetic, more likely to complete sentence with that word but limited to phonetics, not semantics)

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7
Q

What do we need consciousness for?

A

Almost all complex forms of cognition
▪️ Logical operations
▪️ Cause and effect
▪️ Sequential information
▪️ Non-trivial maths
▪️ Understanding social and cultural forms of knowledge

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8
Q

When might consciousness IMPAIR function?

A

▪️ Required when learning new complex task BUT gets in the way once we’ve learned that expertise (e.g., expert golfers better when distracted)
▪️ Over-stratigisation (e.g., guess pattern of lights on, 80% on the right so best would be to always choose right but instead we superimpose patterns that don’t exist)

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9
Q

What does change blindness tell us about psychological factors of consciousness?

A

▪️ Its very limited (hard to spot obvious difference)
▪️ May relate closely to attention

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10
Q

What are the main similarities between consciousness and attention?

A

▪️ Feature binding
▪️ Predictive coding
▪️ 300ms delay following presentation
▪️ Highly selective processing (filter all information into few salient features)
▪️ Top-down control
▪️ Competition - the ones that win enter both attention and consciousness

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11
Q

What are the four component processes proposed to be fundamental to attention?

A

▪️ Working memory
▪️ Competitive selection (those most important will enter into attention)
▪️ Top-down sensitivity control
▪️ Filtering for stimuli likely to be behaviourally important (salience filters)

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12
Q

What neurological condition gives us really good insight into the relationship between attention and consciousness?

A

Hemispatial neglect
▪️ Can see but cannot attend to one side of space
▪️ Not conscious of that side of space either

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13
Q

What is Bor and Seth’s model for the connection between consciousness and attention?

A
  1. World
  2. Bottom up saliency filtering (what’s important)
  3. Modulated by general current state (e.g., memories, emotions, expectations, goals)
  4. Competitive selection - only those MOST important pass conscious threshold to reach conscious content
  5. All fed back by top-down control to inform general state
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14
Q

How limited is consciousness?

A

Distinguish between 3-4 items (pretty universal)

BUT can use chunking and strategies to improve this (multi-level pattern spotting unique to use)

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15
Q

How does chunking help learning?

A

We chunk data and information based on years of pattern recognition to help develop complex skills

Does consciousness aid this?

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16
Q

What are the two key questions relating to consciousness in the brain?

A
  1. What in the brain allows us to have the conscious experiences (CONTENT) we have when awake?
  2. What in the brain distinguishes the LEVELS of consciousness (e.g., awake, dreaming, deep sleep, anaesthesia, coma)?
17
Q

What is the issue with brain scanning and standard images to study contents of consciousness?

A

Hard to distinguish conscious from unconscious experience (both would show differences based on the picture shown)

18
Q

How can we overcome this issue of brain scanning and consciousness?

A

Use bistable stimuli - optical illusions that have two different conscious experiences e.g., old lady and young lady

Conscious perception will change every few seconds - can we capture this in the brain?

19
Q

What was Logothetis’ famous monkey study?

A
  1. Trained on task - L lever for B&W radial, R lever for face, nothing for combination
  2. Binocular rivalry and both stimulus always presented
  3. One percept at a time but alternates
20
Q

What did Logothetis find?

A

▪️ Only ~20% of V1 and V2 neurons involved in change
▪️ Nearly 90% of inferior temporal cortex - key region for consciousness?

BUT only visual/object recognition?

(later study found it in lateral PFC with different stimuli)

21
Q

To summaries all studies on fMRI and changes in visual consciousness with binocular rivalry, what are the two clusters of brain areas thought to be key?

A

▪️ Posterior parietal cortex
▪️ Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex

(frequently coactivated network)

22
Q

What network seems to be involved in changes in conscious content?

A

The prefrontal parietal network

(DLPFC and posterior parietal)

23
Q

How can visibility studies be used to investigate conscious perception?

A

▪️ Look at differences in activation between visible/audible stimuli and masked stimuli
▪️ What is always activated vs what is only present when consciously perceive stimuli
▪️ Can do with fMRI or intracranial EEG

(Prefrontal parietal network irrespective of stimuli!)

24
Q

What have visibility studies using intracranial EEG concluded about consciousness?

A

▪️ When stimuli are conscious, extra activity appears ~300ms after stimulus onset
▪️ Activity is particularly strong in high gamma range (>40Hz frequency spike)

25
Q

What can imagination tasks tell us about consciousness in vegetative states?

A

▪️ Different brain regions activated when asked to imagine playing tennis vs imagine navigating round your house
▪️ If vegetative patients show this same patterns it shows they are conscious - wrongly classified?

26
Q

What might we be able to use to communicate with people in supposed vegetative states?

A

Imagination tasks - if answer is yes, imagine tennis, if answer is no, imagine walking round house

(~15% could thus were wrongly classified)

27
Q

How does brain activity differ between slow-wave sleep, anaesthesia, and vegetative state?

A

▪️ Generally same areas activated (parietal and lateral PFC)
▪️ BUT reduced metabolism as consciousness reduces (vegetative state < slow-wave sleep)

28
Q

Why might the parietal prefrontal network play a key role in consciousness?

A

▪️ Most densely interconnected parts of the brain
▪️ Therefore, best place for combination and integration of sensory input and other features? (e.g., see chair as whole)

29
Q

What can TMS research tell us about the relationship between amount of information and conscious state?

A

▪️ Disturb network to see how much information in the EEG signal
▪️ Lowest amount of information = vegetative state (VS)
▪️ Minimally conscious state < emerging conscious state < locked in syndrome
▪️ Locked in = similar amount of information as wakeful controls
▪️ NREM anaesthesia similar to VS

HOW CONSCIOUS SOMEONE IS DEPENDING ON PCI - LEVEL OF INFORMATION IN THEIR BRAIN

30
Q

How does LSD affect level of information in the brain?

A

It increases it - increased consciousness??

31
Q

How do we generate consciousness?

A

▪️ Network structure/function
▪️ Two way cross talk (feedback and feedforwards)
▪️ Integrated/combined information

32
Q

What is Integrated Information Theory (ITT) of consciousness?

A

▪️ Consciousness = integrated information + differentiation (spotting lots of different things)
▪️ Mathematical calculation combining these to score level of consciousness/conscious capacity

INTEGRATION AND DIFFERENTIATION

33
Q

According to ITT, which brain structures can and cannot support conscious capacity?

A

▪️ Good = prefrontal parietal network, thalamocortical system
▪️ Bad = cerebellum (cases of people with no cerebellum but pretty good lives?)

34
Q

What might the ITTs claim about consciousness in the cerebellum tell us?

A

Consciousness is not about number of neurons because cerebellum has the most of any structure

35
Q

When is the PPN likely most activated?

A

When spotting and using patterns

36
Q

What is the difference between synergistic and redundant information?

A

▪️ Synergistic = need to combine for experience (e.g., visual input from both eyes to determine depth perception)
▪️ Redundant = extra information that is not strictly necessary (e.g., can still see whole chair with visual input form just one eye)

37
Q

What can synergy and redundancy tell as about the PNN and possibly consciousness?

A

▪️ PNN is key for synergy - integrating information!
▪️ Complex thought
▪️ More synergy as task gets more complex
▪️ Synergy is associated with consciousness

38
Q

What is necessary and sufficient for consciousness?

A
  1. Enabling structures (e.g., thalamus - implicated in VS)
  2. Content specific regions (e.g., inferotemporal cortex for visual object recognition)
  3. “Inner core” of highly interconnected PPN to supper general role (synergy? integration?)
39
Q

From this research, what appears to be the main (evolutionary?) purpose of consciousness?

A

To generate innovative structured/patterned solutions to novel/complex problems, via analysis of attentionally boosted relevant information