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The Science of Consciousness

<!--HTML-->We not only act in the world but we consciously perceive it. The interactions of myriad of neuronal and sub-neuronal processes that are responsible for visual behaviors also give rise to the daily movie screened for our benefit in the privacy of our own skull. I will discuss the emp...

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Autor principal: Dr. Koch, Christof
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2016818
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author Dr. Koch, Christof
author_facet Dr. Koch, Christof
author_sort Dr. Koch, Christof
collection CERN
description <!--HTML-->We not only act in the world but we consciously perceive it. The interactions of myriad of neuronal and sub-neuronal processes that are responsible for visual behaviors also give rise to the daily movie screened for our benefit in the privacy of our own skull. I will discuss the empirical progress that has been achieved over the past several decades in characterizing the behavioral and the neuronal correlates of consciousness in human and non-human animals and in dissociating selective visual attention from visual consciousness. I will introduce Tononi’s integrated Information Theory (IIT) that explains in a principled manner which physical systems are capable of conscious, subjective experience. The theory explains many empirical facts about consciousness and its pathologies in humans. It can also be extrapolated to more difficult cases, such as fetuses, mice, or bees. The theory predicts that many, seemingly complex, systems are not conscious, in particular digital computers running software, even if these were to faithfully simulate the neuronal networks making up the human brain.
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spelling cern-20168182022-11-02T22:19:46Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2016818engDr. Koch, ChristofThe Science of ConsciousnessThe Science of ConsciousnessCERN Colloquium<!--HTML-->We not only act in the world but we consciously perceive it. The interactions of myriad of neuronal and sub-neuronal processes that are responsible for visual behaviors also give rise to the daily movie screened for our benefit in the privacy of our own skull. I will discuss the empirical progress that has been achieved over the past several decades in characterizing the behavioral and the neuronal correlates of consciousness in human and non-human animals and in dissociating selective visual attention from visual consciousness. I will introduce Tononi’s integrated Information Theory (IIT) that explains in a principled manner which physical systems are capable of conscious, subjective experience. The theory explains many empirical facts about consciousness and its pathologies in humans. It can also be extrapolated to more difficult cases, such as fetuses, mice, or bees. The theory predicts that many, seemingly complex, systems are not conscious, in particular digital computers running software, even if these were to faithfully simulate the neuronal networks making up the human brain. oai:cds.cern.ch:20168182015
spellingShingle CERN Colloquium
Dr. Koch, Christof
The Science of Consciousness
title The Science of Consciousness
title_full The Science of Consciousness
title_fullStr The Science of Consciousness
title_full_unstemmed The Science of Consciousness
title_short The Science of Consciousness
title_sort science of consciousness
topic CERN Colloquium
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2016818
work_keys_str_mv AT drkochchristof thescienceofconsciousness
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