Literature DB >> 28826514

Opaque models: Using drugs and dreams to explore the neurobiological basis of mental phenomena.

Nicolas Langlitz1.   

Abstract

On the basis of four historical and ethnographic case studies of modeling in neuroscience laboratories, this chapter introduces a distinction between transparent and opaque models. A transparent model is a simplified representation of a real world phenomenon. If it is not patently clear, it is at least much better comprehended than its objects of representation. An opaque model, by contrast, looks at one only partially understood phenomenon to stand in for another partially understood phenomenon. Here, the model is often just as complex as its target. Examples of such opaque models discussed in this chapter are the use of hallucinogen intoxication in humans and animals as well as the dreaming brain as models of psychosis as well as the dreaming brain as a model of consciousness in general. Several functions of opaque models are discussed, ranging from the generation of funding to the formulation of new research questions. While science studies scholars have often emphasized the epistemic fertility of failures of representation, the opacity of hallucinogen intoxications and dreams seems to have diminished the potential to produce positive knowledge from the representational relationship between the supposed models and their targets. Bidirectional comparisons between inebriation, dreaming, and psychosis, however, proved to be generative on the level of basic science. Moreover, the opaque models discussed in this chapter implicated cosmologies that steered research endeavors into certain directions rather than others.
© 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Consciousness; Dreaming; Hallucinogens; Models; Psychedelics

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28826514     DOI: 10.1016/bs.pbr.2017.03.002

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


  1 in total

1.  DMT Models the Near-Death Experience.

Authors:  Christopher Timmermann; Leor Roseman; Luke Williams; David Erritzoe; Charlotte Martial; Héléna Cassol; Steven Laureys; David Nutt; Robin Carhart-Harris
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-08-15
  1 in total

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