Task 1 Flashcards

1
Q

First-Person Data

A

Our subjective experiences

–> the feeling that there is something it is like to be us
–> can be different at different times

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2
Q

Third-Person Data

A

objective experiences

Data about:
- brain processes
- behavior
- environmental interactions

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3
Q

Science of Consciousness

A

connects the first-person data to the third-person data

–> explains the1st terms of the 3rd
!! 1 cannot be expressed wholly in terms of 3 data

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4
Q

Methodologies for Third-Person Data

A

assessing what is going on in the brain:
- EEG,
- brain imaging,
- single-cell studies,

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5
Q

Formalisms for Third-Person Data

A

-language,
- images and diagrams,
- computational models

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6
Q

Methodologies for First-Person Data

A
  • not a lot of options
  • untutored introspection and verbal report

Obstacles:
- lack of access to experience
- impossibility to access all at once
- illusions
- changing experiences while introspecting

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7
Q

Formalisms for First-Person Data

A
  • simple language
  • relies on subjective experience

Obstacles:
- imprecision
- non-structural aspects of experience
- different individuals have different experiences

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8
Q

Neural Correlate of Consciousness (NCC)

A

The neural system of systems primarily associated with conscious experience

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9
Q

Interpretation

A

we interpret physical systems to judge the presence of consciousness

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10
Q

Bridging Principles

A

Principles that bridge the gap between physical and phenomenal aspects of consciousness

–> connect the brain activity and subjective experience
–> bridge the gap between first-person and third-person data

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11
Q

Principle of Verbal Report

A

when information is directly available for verbal report or verbally reported, it is conscious

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12
Q

Principle of Availability for Global Control

A

when information is directly available for global control in a cognitive system, then it is conscious
–> global control allows for flexible, adaptive behavior

consciousness selects and prioritizes certain mental processes based on the information that is currently available to it
= this selection process determines the content of conscious experience

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13
Q

Directness Criterion

A

A perceptual experience is considered direct, if the experience
+ is a direct result of sensory input
+ does not involve any
- interpretation,
- inference
- cognitive processing

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14
Q

Rational Reconstruction

A

(1) Consciousness <-> global availability (bridging principles)

(2) Global availability <-> neural process N (empirical work)

(3) Consciousness <-> neural process N (conclusion)

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15
Q

Consequences of NCC

A
  • the NCC will be a mechanism of global availability
  • NCC cannot be established in an independent test for consciousness -> there are limitations to NCCs
  • it is likely that there will be many NCCs
  • global workspace: a functional area responsible for integrating information in the brain and disseminating it to multiple nonconscious specialized processes
  • processes of access consciousness might be the same for phenomenal consciousness
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16
Q

Vegetative State

A

patients who emerge from coma appear to be awake but show no signs of awareness

–> no reproducible evidence of purposeful behavior in response to external stimulation
–> “islands” of preserved brain function may exist

17
Q

Consciousness in Vegetative State Patients

A
  • conscious processing is abolished
  • no mental states, interactions with their environment, intentional actions

–> in a minority of cases, patients have residual cognitive function and even conscious awareness

18
Q

When is someone conscious?

A
  • the ability to report one’s own mental state = fundamental property
  • active maintenance of mental representations
  • strategical processing
  • spontaneous intentional behavior
19
Q

Functional Neuroimaging Techniques and Consciousness

A
  • detect conscious awareness in patients who are assumed to be vegetative
  • fMRI can evaluate vegetative patients’ performance on motor and spatial imagery tasks
  • fMRI can show precursors of perception –> it cannot tell whether a person is aware of this perception
20
Q

Mental Tasks

A

non-communicative patients can communicate their thoughts by modulating their own neural activity

Owen study:
- playing tennis
- imagining the rooms of their house

21
Q

Minimally Conscious State

A

Patients show inconsistent but reproducible signs of awareness
-> including the ability to follow commands,
-> but they remain to communicate interactively