Philosophy and The Sciences: What Is Consciousness? (Part II)
Philosophy and The Sciences: What Is Consciousness? (Part II)
our brain through our senses, with what we become aware of. How does
brain activity give rise to different states of consciousness?
Lets start by examining what states exist. Its useful to think of ones state of
consciousness, as a combination of two factors: wakefulness, or what ones
level of consciousness is; and awareness, having conscious content. Our
level of wakefulness, determines whether were awake or not. Our
awareness is our capacity to think, feel and perceive our environment and
ourselves. Its what enables us to interact with the world, in a meaningful
way. It may seem strange to divide attention in to these two separate factors,
but as well see, its useful. Right now youre fully awake, or at least I hope
you are. So, youre at the high end of the scale for both wakefulness and
awareness. When you fall asleep tonight, youll first become drowsy and
then eventually fall into a deep sleep, where both your wakefulness and
awareness will be low. For people under anaesthesia or in a coma,
awareness and wakefulness are reduced even further.
If these were the only states that existed, we wouldnt need two separate
axes to describe them, theyd all fall along a single line. However, there are
cases where the two axis are dissociated. One is high, while the other is low.
The most obvious example is dreaming where wakefulness is low because
the person is asleep, and awareness is high; the person experiences
feelings, sensations and thoughts. In the rare condition of lucid dreaming
people are even aware that they are in a dream. Unfortunately, there are
also clinical conditions known collectively as disorders of consciousness,
where brain injury leads to high wakefulness and low awareness at the same
time. These conditions include, the vegetative state and the minimally
conscious state. Patients in the vegetative state, have normal sleep wake
cycles, but when theyre awake, with their eyes open, they dont respond to
their environment, and dont interact with it in any way that would indicate
theyre aware of whats going on around them. Sometimes these patients
condition improves, and they are reclassified as being in a minimally
conscious state, indicating that they sometimes show, limited
responsiveness to their environment.
What sort of brain activity determines ones state of consciousness? Theres
no single brain area whose activity is solely responsible for either awareness
or wakefulness. The brain is a vastly integrated system, and a persons state
of consciousness is the outcome of many subsystems combined activity.
There are, however, certain brain areas, whose activity contributes to
specific aspects of consciousness. Wakefulness is highly dependent on
activity in the subcortical structures. So to see what I mean, heres a little
model of a brain. The cortex is the outer layer. And if we look at the inside,
subcortical structures lie deep below the cortex. The areas involved in
wakefulness, include the reticular formation and the thalamus which is right
here in the middle. And these are evolutionarily ancient regions. The
Did those demonstrations work for you? The phenomenon these videos
demonstrate is called inattentional blindness, and its very existence attests
to the intimate link between awareness and attention. Hundreds of studies
have looked at inattentional blindness, in an effort to figure out, what we will
see, and what we will miss, and what factors affect those things. As we just
saw, one of the relevant factors seems to be our attentional set, what we
happen to be looking for. The chances of missing something that were not
looking for are greater. Another relevant factor seems to be the capacity
limits of our visual working memory. Thats the store of visual information
thats available for our immediate use. Researchers have examined how
many elements can appear in a picture before people start missing things.
Now it depends on the exact object, and on the type of change that
happens. But in most cases the number isnt large at all. Its limited to about
four elements.
We now turn to the processes that shape our awareness of the things we do
perceive. To investigate this, researchers often use something called
bistable images. And most well-known example of a bistable image is the
Necker Cube, which can be perceived as if one side of it is in front or as if
the other side of it is in front. The Necker Cube has all three hallmarks of a
bistable image. First of all, it has two possible conscious interpretations.
Second, you cant see both interpretations at the same time. Try it. And third,
these interpretations tend to alternate every few seconds. Another famous
example of a bistable image is the Rubin face vase, where you can see the
same image either as two faces facing each other, or as a single vase.
Why are bistable images so useful to consciousness researchers? Well, what
we have here is a case of dissociation between perception and awareness.
The external stimulus, the thing thats out there in the world, does not
change. Yet our perception does change. Since the only change is
happening in our own brains, if we understood the process that causes this
to happen, we would have a window into how the brain selects content for
representation and consciousness. Several kinds of bistable image have
been used in neuroimaging research, where researchers have looked to see
which areas of the brain would be active at the same time as perceptual
switches. Repeatedly, researchers have found time-locked activity, where
brain areas were active at the same time as a perceptual switch. Not only in
visual areas of the brain, which are in the occipital lobe, way back here. But
also in frontal and parietal regions of the brain. Areas we have mentioned
before, as related to external awareness.
So can we conclude that this frontal and parietal activity causes the changes
in perception? Not so fast. Just because something happens to the brain at
the same time as a perceptual event, such as a switch in the bi-stable image,
that doesnt mean that this activity causes that change. We know that it
correlates with the change, we know that it happens at the same time as the
change, but correlation is not causation. It could be that this brain activity is
involved in noticing that the change has occurred at the same time that its
occurring. It could also be that something else, like activity in a completely
different brain area, is causing both the change in perception and the
activity in frontal and parietal cortex.
If a certain brain region has a causal influence, then actively manipulating
its activity will cause changes in perception. Thats what we need to do to
infer causality. To do this, to manipulate brain activity, researches often use a
technique called transcranial magnetic stimulation, or TMS for short. We do
it in places like this, the University of Edinburghs TMS lab. TMS works by
applying a brief powerful magnetic pulse to the surface of the head, and
this interferes temporarily with the activity of the area of cortex right
underneath it. So, to demonstrate that Ive got Suilin here, whos going to
help me by applying TMS to my Brocas area. Thats the area in my, the left
side of my brain, that produces speech. So were going to see if applying
TMS to my Brocas area can interfere with my speech production. So Im
going to count up. And when I reach five, please press the button. One, two,
three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. So yes, TMS interfered with my
speech production and this is how we learn about brain activity, by
interfering with activity in specific areas and seeing what kind of function
gets interfered with.
Supplying TMS to Brocas area, the way we did just now, that has immediate
functional consequences. We can see what the activation does. But not
every bit of the brain that we apply TMS to will have immediate observable
consequences. And sometimes we want to apply TMS to an area where we
wont see immediately that something jumps or something changes, just to
see what kinds of effects this has on things like, perception. So a number of
researchers have applied TMS to parietal cortex. Thats up here. In order to
see what kind of an effect this has on bistable perception. Surprisingly, it
turns out, that different parts of parietal cortex play a different role, in
bistable perception. Applying TMS to certain part of parietal cortex makes
the switching a lot slower. And applying TMS to slightly different parts of
parietal cortex has the opposite effect. Making switches, faster. So we now
know the parietal cortex is definitely causally involved in bistable
perception. But we still need to figure out what role exactly each of these
different areas within parietal cortex plays and how the neural system as a
whole reaches a consensus, about what were seeing. To understand
consciousness we need to know the difference between processes that
require awareness, and those that dont. If we can perceive something
without awareness, that tells us awareness is not necessary for that kind of
perception. It therefore narrows down the list, of the processes that
awareness is necessary for.
So how do we investigate unconscious perception? Researchers have
developed various ways of showing people things that enter the eyes, but
dont reach peoples awareness. This is different from showing people
things that they dont notice because theyre not paying attention, as we saw
earlier with inattentional blindness. Its also different from visual illusions,
which distort perception. What were talking about here, is showing people
things, but actively suppressing them from awareness.
Here, well talk about one widely used technique as an example. This
technique is backward visual masking, where one image is shown very
briefly, and its followed immediately after by another image at the same
location, presented for longer. When this is done right, people cant report
the first of the two images, and often deny that it was there at all. One of the
first studies to use backward masking to investigate unconscious
perception, employed a method called masked priming. People were
shown a single word followed immediately by a mask that was a
meaningless pattern. After each such presentation, they were shown a string
of letters and they had to decide whether it was a real word or not.
Interestingly, people were faster to detect real words when they were
semantically related to the word that had been masked, than when it was
not. For example, if the masked word was infant, people would then be
faster to recognize the word child than they would to recognize the word
orange.
This indicated that the masked word had activated a semantic network in
the brain. And that the masked word had been processed deeply enough to
enable faster recognition of related words. And this priming effect, was just
as large without awareness as with it. In recent brain imaging work,
researchers have shown that masked words activate visual areas of the brain
more than meaningless strings of letters do, even when people remain
unaware of the masked words. However, unmasked words activate many
more regions of the brain, and these areas communicate with each other
much more when the words are unmasked.
In this lecture we have examined several of the philosophical and scientific
current approaches to consciousness. At this point, there is no theory, that
offers a full unified account of consciousness and how it arises from the
activity of physical systems. Current theories offer agendas for future
research: what themes and what issues we should be following if we want to
reach an understanding of consciousness. But only time will tell which ones
of these teams and which ones of these directions will turn out to be fruitful.
And only time will tell how much progress we will make.
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