Eight-circuit Model Of Consciousness Pdf Freel
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Like the main complex, the two hemispheres are more conscious than the subcortical region. Likewise, there is a sense in which the subcortical region is more conscious than the two hemispheres. A reason for this could be that some of the circuits in the main complex do not give as much information as the subcortical region. In that case, the information content of the main complex will be greater than that of the subcortical region, but the difference will be less than it would be if the main complex had no such circuits.
The main complex is more conscious than the two smaller complexes. This is easily understandable in terms of the higher information content of the main complex. However, a more subtle explanation might be that the information present in one hemisphere informs the other hemisphere, which, in turn, informs the rest of the brain, to which it is attached, and so on until the information reaches consciousness. The information content of each main complex is approximately the same but we might expect it to grow linearly with the number of circuits along the path of information integration. To test this idea, the following experiment may be performed: one could obtain, from within the main complex, the output from each of its circuits and then compare the information they provide about the inputs they are getting from the subcortical and the external world. If the latter is more informative about the former, then there is a possibility of explaining the greater conscious awareness of the main complex by means of information transfer through its circuits. (If the information content of the main complex grows more slowly than linearly with the number of circuits, then the difference in information content becomes much harder to understand.)
If the subcortical region were to be cloned (i.e., no callosal connections were cut), and its major complex was made up of the copies of the two hemispheres, then the resulting complex would be roughly as conscious as the main complex in which the callosal connections are cut. Of course, the two hemispheres then would also be conscious, in which case the subcortical region would be the only region that could have conscious experiences.
The question is: How can this precise quantitative model of consciousness be tested, even though no anatomical structures have been identified as the basis of the 8 circuits? They are hard to identify by experiment, but it is possible to detect a change in the connectivity of these circuits by forcing them to share experiences, or to change their functional relationships. What is important is that the connectivity of the circuits themselves remains unchanged. What does this imply for consciousness?
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