Literature DB >> 17475053

Consciousness without a cerebral cortex: a challenge for neuroscience and medicine.

Bjorn Merker1.   

Abstract

A broad range of evidence regarding the functional organization of the vertebrate brain - spanning from comparative neurology to experimental psychology and neurophysiology to clinical data - is reviewed for its bearing on conceptions of the neural organization of consciousness. A novel principle relating target selection, action selection, and motivation to one another, as a means to optimize integration for action in real time, is introduced. With its help, the principal macrosystems of the vertebrate brain can be seen to form a centralized functional design in which an upper brain stem system organized for conscious function performs a penultimate step in action control. This upper brain stem system retained a key role throughout the evolutionary process by which an expanding forebrain - culminating in the cerebral cortex of mammals - came to serve as a medium for the elaboration of conscious contents. This highly conserved upper brainstem system, which extends from the roof of the midbrain to the basal diencephalon, integrates the massively parallel and distributed information capacity of the cerebral hemispheres into the limited-capacity, sequential mode of operation required for coherent behavior. It maintains special connective relations with cortical territories implicated in attentional and conscious functions, but is not rendered nonfunctional in the absence of cortical input. This helps explain the purposive, goal-directed behavior exhibited by mammals after experimental decortication, as well as the evidence that children born without a cortex are conscious. Taken together these circumstances suggest that brainstem mechanisms are integral to the constitution of the conscious state, and that an adequate account of neural mechanisms of conscious function cannot be confined to the thalamocortical complex alone.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17475053     DOI: 10.1017/S0140525X07000891

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Brain Sci        ISSN: 0140-525X            Impact factor:   12.579


  94 in total

1.  Building a neuroscience of pleasure and well-being.

Authors:  Kent C Berridge; Morten L Kringelbach
Journal:  Psychol Well Being       Date:  2011-10-24

2.  Affective consciousness in animals: perspectives on dimensional and primary process emotion approaches.

Authors:  Jaak Panksepp
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2010-08-04       Impact factor: 5.349

3.  Synthetic consciousness: the distributed adaptive control perspective.

Authors:  Paul F M J Verschure
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2016-08-19       Impact factor: 6.237

Review 4.  Behavioral functions of the mesolimbic dopaminergic system: an affective neuroethological perspective.

Authors:  Antonio Alcaro; Robert Huber; Jaak Panksepp
Journal:  Brain Res Rev       Date:  2007-08-21

Review 5.  Affective neuroscience of pleasure: reward in humans and animals.

Authors:  Kent C Berridge; Morten L Kringelbach
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2008-03-03       Impact factor: 4.530

6.  The power of the word may reside in the power of affect.

Authors:  Jaak Panksepp
Journal:  Integr Psychol Behav Sci       Date:  2007-12-04

7.  Examination of frontal and parietal tectocortical attention pathways in spina bifida meningomyelocele using probabilistic diffusion tractography.

Authors:  Victoria J Williams; Jenifer Juranek; Karla Stuebing; Paul T Cirino; Maureen Dennis; Jack M Fletcher
Journal:  Brain Connect       Date:  2013-09-21

Review 8.  Theoretical Models of Consciousness: A Scoping Review.

Authors:  Davide Sattin; Francesca Giulia Magnani; Laura Bartesaghi; Milena Caputo; Andrea Veronica Fittipaldo; Martina Cacciatore; Mario Picozzi; Matilde Leonardi
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2021-04-24

9.  Reduced Repertoire of Cortical Microstates and Neuronal Ensembles in Medically Induced Loss of Consciousness.

Authors:  Michael Wenzel; Shuting Han; Elliot H Smith; Erik Hoel; Bradley Greger; Paul A House; Rafael Yuste
Journal:  Cell Syst       Date:  2019-05-01       Impact factor: 10.304

10.  On consciousness, resting state fMRI, and neurodynamics.

Authors:  Arvid Lundervold
Journal:  Nonlinear Biomed Phys       Date:  2010-06-03
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