» Articles » PMID: 34803643

The Temporally-Integrated Causality Landscape: Reconciling Neuroscientific Theories With the Phenomenology of Consciousness

Overview
Specialty Neurology
Date 2021 Nov 22
PMID 34803643
Citations 7
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

In recent years, there has been a proliferation of neuroscientific theories of consciousness. These include theories which explicitly point to EM fields, notably Operational Architectonics and, more recently, the General Resonance Theory. In phenomenological terms, human consciousness is a unified composition of contents. These contents are specific and meaningful, and they exist from a subjective point of view. Human conscious experience is temporally continuous, limited in content, and coherent. Based upon those phenomenal observations, pre-existing theories of consciousness, and a large body of experimental evidence, I derived the Temporally-Integrated Causality Landscape (TICL). In brief, the TICL proposes that the neural correlate of consciousness is a structure of temporally integrated causality occurring over a large portion of the thalamocortical system. This structure is composed of a large, integrated set of neuronal elements (the System), which contains some subsystems, defined as having a higher level of temporally-integrated causality than the System as a whole. Each Subsystem exists from the point of view of the System, in the form of meaningful content. In this article, I review the TICL and consider the importance of EM forces as a mechanism of neural causality. I compare the fundamentals of TICL to those of several other neuroscientific theories. Using five major characteristics of phenomenal consciousness as a standard, I compare the basic tenets of Integrated Information Theory, Global Neuronal Workspace, General Resonance Theory, Operational Architectonics, and the Temporo-spatial Theory of Consciousness with the framework of the TICL. While the literature concerned with these theories tends to focus on different lines of evidence, there are fundamental areas of agreement. This means that, in time, it may be possible for many of them to converge upon the truth. In this analysis, I conclude that a primary distinction which divides these theories is the feature of spatial and temporal nesting. Interestingly, this distinction does not separate along the fault line between theories explicitly concerned with EM fields and those which are not. I believe that reconciliation is possible, at least in principle, among those theories that recognize the following: just as the contents of consciousness are distinctions within consciousness, the neural correlates of conscious content should be distinguishable from but fall within the spatial and temporal boundaries of the full neural correlates of consciousness.

Citing Articles

Mental causation: an evolutionary perspective.

Lacalli T Front Psychol. 2024; 15:1394669.

PMID: 38741757 PMC: 11089241. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1394669.


Carving Nature at Its Joints: A Comparison of CEMI Field Theory with Integrated Information Theory and Global Workspace Theory.

McFadden J Entropy (Basel). 2023; 25(12).

PMID: 38136515 PMC: 10743215. DOI: 10.3390/e25121635.


Don't forget the boundary problem! How EM field topology can address the overlooked cousin to the binding problem for consciousness.

Gomez-Emilsson A, Percy C Front Hum Neurosci. 2023; 17:1233119.

PMID: 37600559 PMC: 10435742. DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2023.1233119.


Consciousness and its hard problems: separating the ontological from the evolutionary.

Lacalli T Front Psychol. 2023; 14:1196576.

PMID: 37484112 PMC: 10362341. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1196576.


On the origins and evolution of qualia: An experience-space perspective.

Lacalli T Front Syst Neurosci. 2022; 16:945722.

PMID: 36032325 PMC: 9399462. DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2022.945722.


References
1.
van Dijk H, Schoffelen J, Oostenveld R, Jensen O . Prestimulus oscillatory activity in the alpha band predicts visual discrimination ability. J Neurosci. 2008; 28(8):1816-23. PMC: 6671447. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1853-07.2008. View

2.
Tononi G, Boly M, Massimini M, Koch C . Integrated information theory: from consciousness to its physical substrate. Nat Rev Neurosci. 2016; 17(7):450-61. DOI: 10.1038/nrn.2016.44. View

3.
Mashour G, Hudetz A . Neural Correlates of Unconsciousness in Large-Scale Brain Networks. Trends Neurosci. 2018; 41(3):150-160. PMC: 5835202. DOI: 10.1016/j.tins.2018.01.003. View

4.
Dehaene S, Changeux J . Ongoing spontaneous activity controls access to consciousness: a neuronal model for inattentional blindness. PLoS Biol. 2005; 3(5):e141. PMC: 1074751. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0030141. View

5.
Ploner M, Lee M, Wiech K, Bingel U, Tracey I . Prestimulus functional connectivity determines pain perception in humans. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009; 107(1):355-60. PMC: 2806712. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0906186106. View