The word consciousness gets thrown around a lot on these forums, but what does it really mean? The first, easy, shallow definition to come up on The Internet is “the quality or state of being aware especially of something within oneself”. So when do humans become “aware”? Looking back on your own experiences as a child, would you really call yourself “conscious”? What is the relation between wakefulness and consciousness? What is consciousness?
I’m trying something distinct from the typical long-winded highbrow posts seem here: bullet pointing data[1], with admittedly subjective conclusions and some questions/wonderings for more active engagement and personal opinion-forming with the topic. Partially wikipedia-style, given the sheer density of footnotes, but much more speculative, with tendrils extending into various broader topics.
Self-awareness is associated with an area of the brain called the DMN (default mode network)
Maybe it can be selectively blocked
Or selectively electrically stimulated (what effects would that have on someone’s life?)
When do we become self-aware?
Children have a DMN that is much more weakly connected.[2]What is the critical point for self-awareness and how can it be stimulated earlier?
Conscious vs Self-aware
A nomenclature issue—these are often used to describe the same idea, but consciousness is often associated with the variable “in a sleep state”. Can it be quantified by just checking frequencies of brain waves?
In that case, is being in REM sleep conscious? Is the word “consciousness” sufficient?
Is lucid dreaming conscious? (more research needs to be done on this—how exactly does a lucid dreaming state differ from REM)
I propose [3]a two-pronged definition, each part individually specified and quantified (in the past[4], complexity of brain activity has been used to measure consciousness—that is effective when consciousness is artificially induced through anesthetics but less valuable practically):
degrees of wakefulness—measured through frequencies of EEG waves, or in the future, if REM sleep should not count as wakefulness, biosensing[5] of various neurotransmitters such as glycine or specific proportional combinations of histamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin[6]
degrees of self-awareness—measured by connectiveness of DMN
Different proportions of these data points can make up distinct, discrete “types” of consciousness
Consciousness is exclusively in memory [theory][7]
We perceive stimuli 100-150ms (up to 400 - nearly half a second!) after they happen
Our brains are creating conscious experiences in memory, not in real-time
Eye saccades[8] exist, which involve our minds just warping our perception of time to fix inherent inadequacies in input
Can we slow down time?
If conscious experience is in memory, what is stopping humans from perceiving things more slowly and stretching out their existence? This happens when adrenaline is released[9] and thoughts speed up, but is there a way to make this sustainable? Is the brain’s physiology a limitation or is it just habit/specialisation?
Internal monologues
Very obvious manifestation of consciousness, activates DMN
Not everyone has one—how does the experience of constant verbal feedback stream differ from a conceptual one? Are their conceptual connections more strongly connected?
How do certain inputs or lack thereof in general (vision, hearing, etc) affect perception of life?
Consciousness on a wake-sleep level is not linear—when sleep deprived, people can lapse into 10-15 second bursts of delta waves (typical wakeful state is alpha/beta)
Are states of psychosis and delirium an entirely separate form of consciousness? Are personality disorders (for example, those that can be imposed by dopamine agonists)? What about psychedelics?
Why do we not have conscious control of certain subconscious systems?
There are certain parts of the peripheral nervous system such as breathing and blinking that we can control by will. But why can we not consciously control pain?[11] Will it be possible to do this in the future, forging new communication channels?
Meditation
Increases DMN activity and is associated with a slew of benefits—also falls into a distinct category of consciousness?
The brain is just a communication network of electrical signals built to optimize for a specific goal [12]. Where does consciousness come in evolutionarily? Are hive minds conscious?
Is AI conscious?
Complex problem in and of itself—can it measured as it is biologically, through complexity or the measurable output of processing patterns?
I believe that offering up information in the most concise way possible and linking to more in-depth data is the most efficient way to convey a point. I personally find it really bothersome to read through something where I’m familiar with a lot of the background information but the author still explains it in detail within their post about a more complex topic. I also find value in forming my own conclusions from data instead of taking someone else’s opinion, and if everyone did this, the scientific (and of course philosophical, perhaps social) community would benefit from more unique ideas.
We readily accept interpretations of experiments that may not get at the actual cause (for example, it is widely believed that serotonin disbalance cause depression, however a recent meta-analysis/review found no correlation), but if people independently consider/derive systems, disregarding some known information, someone will hit on something new to test. This will increase the overall rate of innovation, humanity’s best trait (in my opinion).
I am not a neuroscientist—yet. If I go that path in life, I will try to experiment further with this. I am certain that similar schemes have been proposed, but technology has come a long way and being able to multi-dimensionally, ideally non-invasively quantify consciousness with the granularity of modern tech is novel
What is Consciousness?
The word consciousness gets thrown around a lot on these forums, but what does it really mean? The first, easy, shallow definition to come up on The Internet is “the quality or state of being aware especially of something within oneself”. So when do humans become “aware”? Looking back on your own experiences as a child, would you really call yourself “conscious”? What is the relation between wakefulness and consciousness? What is consciousness?
I’m trying something distinct from the typical long-winded highbrow posts seem here: bullet pointing data[1], with admittedly subjective conclusions and some questions/wonderings for more active engagement and personal opinion-forming with the topic. Partially wikipedia-style, given the sheer density of footnotes, but much more speculative, with tendrils extending into various broader topics.
Self-awareness is associated with an area of the brain called the DMN (default mode network)
Maybe it can be selectively blocked
Or selectively electrically stimulated (what effects would that have on someone’s life?)
When do we become self-aware?
Children have a DMN that is much more weakly connected.[2]What is the critical point for self-awareness and how can it be stimulated earlier?
Conscious vs Self-aware
A nomenclature issue—these are often used to describe the same idea, but consciousness is often associated with the variable “in a sleep state”. Can it be quantified by just checking frequencies of brain waves?
In that case, is being in REM sleep conscious? Is the word “consciousness” sufficient?
Is lucid dreaming conscious? (more research needs to be done on this—how exactly does a lucid dreaming state differ from REM)
I propose [3]a two-pronged definition, each part individually specified and quantified (in the past[4], complexity of brain activity has been used to measure consciousness—that is effective when consciousness is artificially induced through anesthetics but less valuable practically):
degrees of wakefulness—measured through frequencies of EEG waves, or in the future, if REM sleep should not count as wakefulness, biosensing[5] of various neurotransmitters such as glycine or specific proportional combinations of histamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin[6]
degrees of self-awareness—measured by connectiveness of DMN
Different proportions of these data points can make up distinct, discrete “types” of consciousness
Consciousness is exclusively in memory [theory][7]
We perceive stimuli 100-150ms (up to 400 - nearly half a second!) after they happen
Our brains are creating conscious experiences in memory, not in real-time
Eye saccades[8] exist, which involve our minds just warping our perception of time to fix inherent inadequacies in input
Can we slow down time?
If conscious experience is in memory, what is stopping humans from perceiving things more slowly and stretching out their existence? This happens when adrenaline is released[9] and thoughts speed up, but is there a way to make this sustainable? Is the brain’s physiology a limitation or is it just habit/specialisation?
Internal monologues
Very obvious manifestation of consciousness, activates DMN
Not everyone has one—how does the experience of constant verbal feedback stream differ from a conceptual one? Are their conceptual connections more strongly connected?
How do certain inputs or lack thereof in general (vision, hearing, etc) affect perception of life?
Sleep deprivation, psychosis, and delirium
Microsleeps[10]
Consciousness on a wake-sleep level is not linear—when sleep deprived, people can lapse into 10-15 second bursts of delta waves (typical wakeful state is alpha/beta)
Are states of psychosis and delirium an entirely separate form of consciousness? Are personality disorders (for example, those that can be imposed by dopamine agonists)? What about psychedelics?
Why do we not have conscious control of certain subconscious systems?
There are certain parts of the peripheral nervous system such as breathing and blinking that we can control by will. But why can we not consciously control pain?[11] Will it be possible to do this in the future, forging new communication channels?
Meditation
Increases DMN activity and is associated with a slew of benefits—also falls into a distinct category of consciousness?
The brain is just a communication network of electrical signals built to optimize for a specific goal [12]. Where does consciousness come in evolutionarily? Are hive minds conscious?
Is AI conscious?
Complex problem in and of itself—can it measured as it is biologically, through complexity or the measurable output of processing patterns?
I believe that offering up information in the most concise way possible and linking to more in-depth data is the most efficient way to convey a point. I personally find it really bothersome to read through something where I’m familiar with a lot of the background information but the author still explains it in detail within their post about a more complex topic. I also find value in forming my own conclusions from data instead of taking someone else’s opinion, and if everyone did this, the scientific (and of course philosophical, perhaps social) community would benefit from more unique ideas.
We readily accept interpretations of experiments that may not get at the actual cause (for example, it is widely believed that serotonin disbalance cause depression, however a recent meta-analysis/review found no correlation), but if people independently consider/derive systems, disregarding some known information, someone will hit on something new to test. This will increase the overall rate of innovation, humanity’s best trait (in my opinion).
The maturing architecture of the brain’s default network—https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.0800376105
I am not a neuroscientist—yet. If I go that path in life, I will try to experiment further with this. I am certain that similar schemes have been proposed, but technology has come a long way and being able to multi-dimensionally, ideally non-invasively quantify consciousness with the granularity of modern tech is novel
Brain activity complexity has a nonlinear relation to the level of propofol sedation - https://www.bjanaesthesia.org.uk/article/S0007-0912(21)00283-X/fulltext
An Update of the Classical and Novel Methods Used for Measuring Fast Neurotransmitters During Normal and Brain Altered Function—https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4428024
The Neurotransmitters of Sleep—https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8761080/
Cueing Attention after the Stimulus Is Gone Can Retrospectively Trigger Conscious Perception—https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(12)01391-7
nitter.net/Foone/status/1014280100173398017
When time slows down: The influence of threat on time perception in anxiety
Microsleep episodes in the borderland between wakefulness and sleep—https://boris.unibe.ch/134858/1/Hertig_Godeschalk%2C%202019%2C%20Microsleep%20episodes%20in%20the%20borderland%20between%20wakefulness%20and%20sleep.pd
Effects of mindfulness meditation training on anticipatory alpha modulation in primary somatosensory cortex—https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21501665/