What is consciousness Michael S. A. Graziano

Here are two images of a house.

There’s one obvious difference,

but to this patient, P.S.,

they looked completely identical.

P.S. had suffered a stroke that
damaged the right side of her brain,

leaving her unaware of everything
on her left side.

But though she could discern no difference
between the houses,

when researchers asked her
which she would prefer to live in,

she chose the house that wasn’t burning—

not once, but again and again.

P.S.’s brain was still processing
information

from her whole field of vision.

She could see both images

and tell the difference between them,

she just didn’t know it.

If someone threw a ball at her left side,

she might duck.

But she wouldn’t have any
awareness of the ball,

or any idea why she ducked.

P.S.’s condition,

known as hemispatial neglect,

reveals an important distinction between
the brain’s processing of information

and our experience of that processing.

That experience is what
we call consciousness.

We are conscious of both the external
world and our internal selves—

we are aware of an image

in much the same way we are aware of
ourselves looking at an image,

or our inner thoughts and emotions.

But where does consciousness come from?

Scientists, theologians, and philosophers

have been trying to get to the bottom of
this question for centuries—

without reaching any consensus.

One recent theory is that

consciousness is the brain’s imperfect
picture of its own activity.

To understand this theory,

it helps to have a clear idea

of one important way the brain processes
information from our senses.

Based on sensory input,

it builds models,

which are continuously updating,
simplified descriptions

of objects and events in the world.

Everything we know is based
on these models.

They never capture every detail of
the things they describe,

just enough for the brain to determine
appropriate responses.

For instance, one model built deep
into the visual system

codes white light as brightness
without color.

In reality,

white light includes wavelengths

that correspond to all the
different colors we can see.

Our perception of white light is wrong
and oversimplified,

but good enough for us to function.

Likewise, the brain’s model of the
physical body

keeps track of the configuration
of our limbs,

but not of individual cells
or even muscles,

because that level of information
isn’t needed to plan movement.

If it didn’t have the model keeping track
of the body’s size, shape,

and how it is moving at any moment,

we would quickly injure ourselves.

The brain also needs models of itself.

For example,

the brain has the ability to pay attention
to specific objects and events.

It also controls that focus,

shifting it from one thing to another,

internal and external,

according to our needs.

Without the ability to direct our focus,

we wouldn’t be able to assess threats,
finish a meal, or function at all.

To control focus effectively,

the brain has to construct a model
of its own attention.

With 86 billion neurons constantly
interacting with each other,

there’s no way the brain’s model of its
own information processing

can be perfectly self-descriptive.

But like the model of the body,

or our conception of white light,

it doesn’t have to be.

Our certainty that we have a
metaphysical, subjective experience

may come from one of the brain’s models,

a cut-corner description of what it means
to process information

in a focused and deep manner.

Scientists have already begun trying
to figure out

how the brain creates that self model.

MRI studies are a promising avenue
for pinpointing the networks involved.

These studies compare patterns
of neural activation

when someone is and isn’t conscious
of a sensory stimulus, like an image.

The results show that the areas needed
for visual processing

are activated whether or not the
participant is aware of the image,

but a whole additional network lights up

only when they are conscious
of seeing the image.

Patients with hemispatial neglect,
like P.S.,

typically have damage to one particular
part of this network.

More extensive damage to the network
can sometimes lead to a vegetative state,

with no sign of consciousness.

Evidence like this brings us closer
to understanding

how consciousness is built into the brain,

but there’s still much more to learn.

For instance,

the way neurons in the networks
related to consciousness

compute specific pieces of information

is outside the scope of our
current technology.

As we approach questions of consciousness
with science,

we’ll open new lines of inquiry
into human identity.

这是房子的两张图片。

有一个明显的区别,

但对于这个病人,P.S.,

他们看起来完全一样。

附言 中风了
,她的右脑受损,

让她对左侧的一切一无所知

但尽管她看不出
这些房子之间有什么区别,

但当研究人员问
她更喜欢住在哪栋房子时,

她选择了没有燃烧的房子——

不是一次,而是一次又一次。

P.S. 的大脑仍在处理

来自她整个视野的信息。

她可以看到这两个图像

并分辨它们之间的区别,

她只是不知道。

如果有人向她的左侧扔球,

她可能会躲开。

但她对球没有任何
意识,

也不知道她为什么要躲避。

P.S. 的状况,

被称为半空间忽视,

揭示
了大脑对信息的处理

与我们对这种处理的体验之间的重要区别。

这种体验就是
我们所说的意识。

我们对外部
世界和内部自我

都有意识——我们意识到图像

的方式与我们意识到
自己在看图像

或内心的想法和情感的方式大致相同。

但意识从何而来? 几个世纪以来

,科学家、神学家和哲学家

一直试图弄清
这个问题的根源——

但没有达成任何共识。

最近的一种理论是,

意识是大脑
对其自身活动的不完美画面。

要理解这一理论

,有助于清楚地了解

大脑处理
来自我们感官的信息的一种重要方式。

基于感官输入,

它构建模型,

这些模型不断更新,

对世界上的物体和事件进行简化描述。

我们所知道的一切都是
基于这些模型。

他们从不捕捉
他们描述的事物的每一个细节,

仅仅足以让大脑确定
适当的反应。

例如,一种
深入视觉系统的模型将

白光编码为
没有颜色的亮度。

实际上,

白光包括


我们能看到的所有不同颜色相对应的波长。

我们对白光的感知是错误的
且过于简单化,

但足以让我们发挥作用。

同样,大脑的身体模型

会跟踪
我们四肢的配置,

但不会跟踪单个细胞
甚至肌肉,

因为
计划运动不需要该级别的信息。

如果它没有模型
跟踪身体的大小、形状

以及它在任何时候是如何移动的,

我们很快就会受伤。

大脑也需要自己的模型。

例如

,大脑具有
关注特定对象和事件的能力。

它还控制焦点,根据我们的需要

将其从一件事转移到另一件事,

内部和外部

如果没有能力引导我们的注意力,

我们将无法评估威胁、
完成一顿饭或根本无法运作。

为了有效地控制注意力

,大脑必须构建
自己的注意力模型。

由于 860 亿个神经元不断地
相互作用

,大脑的
信息处理模型

不可能是完美的自我描述的。

但就像身体的模型,

或者我们对白光的概念一样,

它不一定是。

我们确信我们有一种
形而上学的主观体验

可能来自大脑的一个模型,

这是

以集中和深入的方式处理信息意味着什么的简要描述。

科学家们已经开始试图

弄清楚大脑是如何创造这种自我模型的。

MRI 研究是确定所涉及网络的有前途的途径

这些研究比较

当某人意识到和不
意识到感觉刺激(例如图像)时的神经激活模式。

结果表明,

无论
参与者是否意识到图像,视觉处理所需的区域都会被激活,

只有当他们
意识到看到图像时,整个额外的网络才会亮起。

患有半空间忽视的患者,
如 P.S.,

通常会损害
该网络的一个特定部分。

对网络的更广泛破坏
有时会导致植物人状态

,没有意识的迹象。

像这样的证据让我们更接近于

理解意识是如何建立在大脑中的,

但还有很多东西需要学习。

例如,与意识

相关的网络中的神经元

计算特定信息的

方式超出了我们
当前技术的范围。

当我们用科学处理意识问题时

我们将开启对
人类身份的新探究。