Literature DB >> 22940534

Consciousness, crosstalk, and the mereological fallacy: an evolutionary perspective.

Rodrick Wallace1.   

Abstract

The cross-sectional decontextualization afflicting contemporary neuroscience - attributing to 'the brain' what is the province of the whole organism - is mirrored by an evolutionary decontextualization exceptionalizing consciousness. The living state is characterized by cognitive processes at all scales and levels of organization. Many can be associated with dual information sources that 'speak' a 'language' of behavior-in-context. Shifting global broadcasts analogous to consciousness, albeit far slower - wound healing, tumor control, immune function, gene expression, etc. - have emerged through repeated evolutionary exaptation of the crosstalk and noise inherent to all information transmission. These recruit 'unconscious' cognitive modules into tunable arrays as needed to meet threats and opportunities across multiple frames of reference. The development is straightforward, based on the powerful necessary conditions imposed by the asymptotic limit theorems of communication theory, in the same sense that the Central Limit Theorem constrains sums of stochastic variates. Recognition of information as a form of free energy instantiated by physical processes that consume free energy permits analogs to phase transition and nonequilibrium thermodynamic arguments, leading to 'dynamic regression models' useful for data analysis.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22940534     DOI: 10.1016/j.plrev.2012.08.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Life Rev        ISSN: 1571-0645            Impact factor:   11.025


  5 in total

Review 1.  Cognition and biology: perspectives from information theory.

Authors:  Rodrick Wallace
Journal:  Cogn Process       Date:  2013-06-19

2.  Closed-system 'economic' models for psychiatric disorders: Western atomism and its culture-bound syndromes.

Authors:  Rodrick Wallace
Journal:  Cogn Process       Date:  2015-05-24

Review 3.  Pathologies in functional connectivity, feedback control and robustness: a global workspace perspective on autism spectrum disorders.

Authors:  James F Glazebrook; Rodrick Wallace
Journal:  Cogn Process       Date:  2014-10-18

4.  Blowback: new formal perspectives on agriculturally driven pathogen evolution and spread.

Authors:  R Wallace; R G Wallace
Journal:  Epidemiol Infect       Date:  2015-07       Impact factor: 4.434

5.  On the Inherent Instability of Biocognition: Toward New Probability Models and Statistical Tools.

Authors:  Rodrick Wallace; Irina Leonova; Saikat Gochhait
Journal:  Entropy (Basel)       Date:  2022-08-03       Impact factor: 2.738

  5 in total

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