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Exploring the human mind: the perspective of natural sciences 7th International interdisciplinary seminar Ponte di Legno, Italy 31-12-2003 A framework for consciousness Crick & Koch, Nature neuroscience, 2003 AD Manazza, MD General strategy Consciousness: -self-consciousness - emotions -aspects of reality (redness of red, houseness of house) They define the front-head approach to the problem of qualia “fruitless” and, in the mean time, they statue that no one ever explained it successfully, although without demonstrating it. General strategy They study: They try to correlate the neural correlates of one, single conscious perception: the minimal set of neuronal events that gives rise to a specific aspect of a perception (NCC). -Alert macaque: single neurons for a long time -Humans: visual psychology The authors’ framework • A good f. is one that • It’s a useful guide for sounds reasonably further studies. plausible, relative to available scientific data. It often contains unstated aassumptions. A preamble on the cortex • The visual system is highly evolved, learnes from experience, has got a complex epigenetic control. • Neurons higher in the hierarchy will respond to larger and more complex features than lower neurons (receptive field). projection neuron reception A preamble on the cortex • Both receptive and projective field are dynamic and can be modified with experience • Neurons detect most common input correlations and modify themselves to respond to these signals A preamble on the cortex • We thus have a semihierarchical structure of the visual cortex • Many, different stimuli can be merged or separately analaysed Correlation Ib Correlation Ia – correlation Ia Stimulus stimulus stimulus stimulus 1-The homunculus • The front of the brain is “staring at” the back, where sensory data arrive; • “ To be conscious of a thought” is quite odd a concept, not previously shown or demonstrated, thus the two sentences are not • We’re not conscious of easily understandable. our thoughts, but only of their sensory representation; 2- the “zombie” mode Sensory stimuli generate: • This is a brand new concept of reflex, -rapid acting responses, lacking anatomical stereotyped “cortical and physiological reflexes”; explanation, and invading the -slow acting responses, philosophical field. requiring full consciousness. 2b- the “zombie” mode • “Cortical reflexes” use dorsal parietal stream, their stimuli move forward • Conscious activity uses ventral parietal stream, to and fro the parietal cortex and it depends on different visual areas. 3- Coalitions • Transient networks of connected neurons elicit or inhibit their neighbours activity; • Networks may vary in size & functions, though using the same neurons. 4- Representation • Explicit and conscious representation need certain areas activity; • E.g. achromatopsia, prosopoagnosia, achinetopsia • Single visual columns • Observed human send signals to damages are usually different parietal areas. large, and monkeys aren't usually interactive 5- Higher levels first • The first signal travels rapidly to the frontal cortex, then backwards; the resulting back signal may elicit attention. 6- Neuron interconnections There may be different kind of inputs: -Driving -Modulating This is actually a working hypothesis. 7- Snapshots The vision process is, somehow, the result of snapshots: the “digital” 7b- Snapshots vision. Snapshot half-life is not measurable. 7b- Snapshots Consciousness level is reached when neural networks fire above a certain threshold; Ca++levels may fall down slowly, and therefore maintain network activity. [Ca++] time 8- attention and binding • Attention: top-down or bottom-up, it requires a biasing activity between different signals • Thalamus could be the anatomical seat 8b- attention and binding Binding means putting together different aspects of an object: its colour, shape, movement,… If it’s a novel association, it also requires previous nodes collaboration 9- Styles of firing • Synchronized firing ν • Burst of firing • Signal oscillation • First arrived, best served time 10- Penumbra • P. consists of the • How does the brain effects of the neural know what the firing network as a whole: its represents? firing will influence a cohort of peripheral • Confusion between neurons, and these brain and human being ones should help solve the problem of meaning General remarks “Zombie modes show that not all motor outputs from the cortex are carried out consciously. Consciousness depends on certain coalitions that rest on the properties of very elaborate neural networks.” It’s just a bit simplifying. General remarks-2 “Discovering the temporal sequence of such activities, will help us to move from correlation to causation”. POST HOC, ERGO PROPTER HOC Future experiments • Visual illusions and binocular rivalry • Anatomy of cortex areas, their genetic markers, cells interconnections • Fast time / small groups / simultaneous / ≠areas • Seizure onset studies on humans (epilepsy), or neurosurgical interventions Omissions •Thalamus role •Basal ganglia role •Brain stem activity •Frontal cortex hierarchy • Is consciousness peculiar to men or to their nervous systems?