Literature DB >> 18166382

The disunity of consciousness.

Semir Zeki1.   

Abstract

Consciousness is commonly considered to be a single entity, as expressed in the term "unity of consciousness", and neurobiologists are fond of believing that, sooner or later, they will be able to determine its neural correlate (rather than its neural correlates). Here I propose an alternative view, derived from compelling experimental and clinical studies of the primate visual cortex, which suggest that consciousness is not a single unity but consists instead of many components (the micro-consciousnesses) which are distributed in space and time. In this article, I propose that there are multiple consciousnesses which constitute a hierarchy (Zeki and Bartels, 1998, 1999), with what Kant (1996) called the 'synthetic, transcendental' unified consciousness (that of myself as the perceiving person) sitting at the apex. Here, I restrict myself to writing about visual consciousness and, within vision, mainly about the colour and the visual motion systems, about which we know relatively more. For if it can be shown that we are conscious of these two attributes at different times, because of spatially and temporally different mechanisms, then the statement that there is a single, unified consciousness cannot be true.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18166382     DOI: 10.1016/S0079-6123(07)68002-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prog Brain Res        ISSN: 0079-6123            Impact factor:   2.453


  7 in total

Review 1.  Visual spatial cognition in neurodegenerative disease.

Authors:  Katherine L Possin
Journal:  Neurocase       Date:  2010-06-02       Impact factor: 0.881

2.  Breakdown of the brain's functional network modularity with awareness.

Authors:  Douglass Godwin; Robert L Barry; René Marois
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-03-10       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  A thalamic reticular networking model of consciousness.

Authors:  Byoung-Kyong Min
Journal:  Theor Biol Med Model       Date:  2010-03-30       Impact factor: 2.432

4.  Human perceptual decision making: disentangling task onset and stimulus onset.

Authors:  Pedro Cardoso-Leite; Florian Waszak; Jöran Lepsien
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2013-10-18       Impact factor: 5.038

Review 5.  Probing feedforward and feedback contributions to awareness with visual masking and transcranial magnetic stimulation.

Authors:  Evelina Tapia; Diane M Beck
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2014-10-21

Review 6.  A massively asynchronous, parallel brain.

Authors:  Semir Zeki
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2015-05-19       Impact factor: 6.237

7.  The Thymus/Neocortex Hypothesis of the Brain: A Cell Basis for Recognition and Instruction of Self.

Authors:  Silvia Sánchez-Ramón; Florence Faure
Journal:  Front Cell Neurosci       Date:  2017-10-27       Impact factor: 5.505

  7 in total

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