Networks of Conscious Experience: Computational Neuroscience in Understanding Life, Death, and Consciousness
Networks of Conscious Experience: Computational Neuroscience in Understanding Life, Death, and Consciousness
Networks of Conscious Experience: Computational Neuroscience in Understanding Life, Death, and Consciousness
1,2
Gerry Leisman
1
Paul Koch
1
F. R. Carrick Institute for Clinical Ergonomics, Rehabilitation, and Applied Neuroscience of
Leeds Metropolitan University, Leeds, UK
2
University of Haifa, Mt. Carmel, Haifa, Israel 31905
E-mail: g.Leisman@leedsmet.ac.uk
Key Words: Consciousness, Death, Coma, Persistent Vegetative State, Minimally Conscious
State, Continuum Theory, Functional Disconnection
ABSTRACT
being directly responsible for it. Technology reveals that brain activity is associated with
consciousness but is not equivalent to it. We examine how consciousness occurs at critical
of classical computer-like activities in the brain's neural networks. Prevailing views in this camp
are that patterns of neural network activities correlate with mental states, that synchronous
network oscillations in the thalamus and cerebral cortex temporally bind information, and that
subjective experience, or 'qualia'- 'inner life' is a "hard problem" to understand; binding spatially
distributed brain activity into unitary objects, and a coherent sense of self, or 'oneness' is difficult
and involves factors that are neither random nor algorithmic - consciousness cannot be
simulated; explanations are also needed for free will and for subjective time flow.
Convention argues that neurons and their chemical synapses are the fundamental units
of information in the brain, and that conscious experience emerges when a critical level of
complexity is reached in the brain's neural networks. The basic idea is that the mind is a
computer functioning in the brain. In fitting the brain to a computational view, such explanations
levels of neural processes (is it really noise, or underlying levels of complexity; glial cells (which
account for some 80% of brain); dendritic-dendritic processing; electrotonic gap junctions;
cytoplasmic/cytoskeletal activities; and, living state (the brain is alive!); absence of testable
1
These issues of life, death, and consciousness are discussed in the context of Mike, the
headless chicken, who survived for 18 months, and in the context of consciousness with high
the reanimation work of the 1920-30’s Soviets, and in auditory sentence processing in patients
2
INTRODUCTION
While consciousness has been variously defined in the literature as or even as, that
annoying time between naps, its operational definition in the neurosciences is largely
property of classical computer-like activities in brain's neural networks. The prevailing views in
this camp are that patterns of neural networks correlate with mental states, that synchronous
network oscillations in the thalamus and cortex temporally bind information, and that
sense is puzzling. While we know a dead body when we see one and. death appears to us as a
real event; being dead as an indisputable condition. Yet it turns out that even the dead body
retains, for a while, some residual processes of life. Some individual cells still live; some "nests
of cells" still communicate. But no one would argue that the human being is still alive just
because every isolated process that might be called life has not yet ceased.
Much more complicated are those cases when a crucial part of the body-the brain-has
died, yet the rest of the body, including the heart, is maintained by our technological
interventions. In the past, whole-brain death led imminently and irreversibly to the death of the
whole person; the entire body shut down. In the age of modern medicine, this process of
shutting down is potentially suspended, making it difficult to know when or whether death has
occurred.
The brain can lose function or be irreversibly damaged in a variety of ways. Certain
insults will destroy the actual brain tissue anatomy, while others will lead to loss of function due
to anoxic "starvation" of cells in the brain. While we can generate rules based on the interaction
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between environmental and anatomical circumstances, exceptions to those rules make the
Anoxic conditions typically result from lack of oxygenated blood flow, which is often a
direct result of cardiac arrest (asystole), severe brain swelling, drug intoxication and strokes.
Under ischemic or anoxic conditions, the different parts of the brain succumb at different rates.
After only a few minutes (~ 2-4), the cerebrum and cerebellum may suffer irreparable damage.
The brainstem is much more resilient, however, and may be revived after many minutes (~ 15-
20) of anoxia. It is this resilience that enables the condition known as the "persistent vegetative
state," in which a person's brainstem continues to function after the upper brain has been
exhibits brainstem functions of spontaneous breathing, reflexes to light and pain stimulus, and
sleep-wake cycles. This is in contrast to wholly "brain dead" patients who have no functional
brainstem and exhibit none of these traits. If anoxia persists, the brainstem too will eventually
become damaged beyond the possibility of revival. At this point, the entire brain has died, and
lacking medical intervention the body will undergo rigor mortis and putrefaction. However, if a
mechanical ventilator is instituted quickly enough to a victim who has suffered death of the
whole brain, the heart may be resuscitated and circulation and other bodily functions may be
restored, including brain function, as we shall later see. This individual, sustained on a respirator
and exhibiting total and irreversible lack of all functions of the entire brain, is considered by
Clinicians generally employ the term “brain death” to refer to a person whose whole
brain has died and who is thus declared dead within standard medical practice. This usage has
been criticized widely including by the Institute of Medicine (IOM), since it seems to present an
ambiguity between a "dead organism," i.e., a person who is declared dead due to brain injury,
and a "dead organ," i.e. the brain itself. When discussing donation from those who have
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normally been called "brain dead", the IOM recommends the modified term "donation after
neurological determination of death," or DNDD /8/. The question in dispute is precisely whether
For organ donation that occurs after death is declared due to the permanent and
irreversible cessation of heart and lung function, we will also use the most widely accepted term
"donation after cardiac death," or DCD. Here, the IOM proposes the following new locution:
"donation after cardiac determination of death," or DCDD. The usefulness of this innovation
seems to be entirely tied up with the parallel between it and the proposed new term for the
declaring death by neurological criteria, which for this inquiry we have chosen to avoid.
With the need for organs to transplant and an Ad Hoc Committee of the Harvard
Medical School /35/ provided a definition of irreversible coma providing a basis for the
certainly not a worldwide consensus definition of death. These guidelines form the basis of the
“diagnosis” of death that is based on a clinical judgment and not on an effective operational
definition of same. The guidelines indicates that the cause of death should be reasonably
established and be reasonably irreversible with the concept of irreversibility being statistical in it
methodology. The clinical criteria for this determination included: (1) nonreceptivity and
nonresponsivity to externally applied stimuli and inner need; (2) the absence of spontaneous
muscular movements or spontaneous respiration; and (3) no brainstem reflexes that can be
elicited. The report stated that patients who passed these tests should be considered already
dead, notwithstanding the continued function of their circulatory system. Since they were dead,
treatment could be stopped (unilaterally) and organs could be procured even while the heart
The cause may result from a primary brain injury (i.e. trauma or haemorrhage) or from
non- neurological illness (e.g. cardiac arrest with anoxia to brain). This diagnosis may be
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trauma, pre-existing pupillary abnormalities, chronic CO2 retention, and hypothermia. The basis
This wording was also promulgated by the President's Commission for the Study of
Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioural Research, which issued an
influential 1981 report entitled Defining Death: Medical, Legal and Ethical Issues in the
Determination of Death /34/. The first version of the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act (UAGA) in the
United States was promulgated in 1968 /31/ and then revised in 1987 /32/. These acts allowed
an individual to specify that he desired to be an organ donor after his death and that the
determination of death was maintained as a separate statutory matter from the specification of
who may become an organ donor in turn resulting in the treating of brain dead individuals as
dead as the standard clinical paradigm, as it remains to this day. The clinical paradigms based
on legal reports or on legislation do not alter the meaning of "life" and "death," but only the
consequences of transplant, burial, autopsy, transfer of property to the heirs, and so forth /3/.
Death?
As thinkers began to wrestle with the new problems of death that confront us in the age
of ventilators, a salient distinction was made between death of the organism as a whole and
death of the whole organism. The latter term would imply that all processes that could be called
"life" have ceased in an individual for whom they once were operative. It is that absolute
lifelessness that happens sometime after the human person has died. The death of the
"organism as a whole," by comparison, is a much more difficult concept to grasp. To say that
there is an organism as a whole implies that there is something (someone) that (who) exists
over and above the organism's individual material parts. This entity that exists "over and above
its parts" is mortal in a way that the parts of which it is composed are not. Put differently, the
death of the organism as a whole can leave behind living components that contributed, perhaps
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crucially, to the organism's "alive-ness" while it was still living, but those components taken
Once this notion of a mortal organism as “a whole” is accepted, the task is set to
determine what life-like activities of its component parts can persist without being absolute
indicators of continuing organismal life. No one has trouble with positing the co-existence of life
in isolated cells with death of the organism as a whole. Yet the advent of the ventilator
introduces a much more difficult case: continued function in some of the living parts of an
This leaves us with a series of rather difficult questions: Is the death of the person
equivalent to the death of the integrated organism functioning as a whole? Is the wholly brain
dead person still functioning as a whole organism? Are there other physiological failures
besides that of the whole brain that might signal that death has occurred? What functions of the
body are necessary for the human person to continue living? Can we really ever know? And if
not, is death better defined "the old-fashioned way," as the permanent and irreversible cessation
of breathing and heartbeat, when the individual is indisputably dead as seen through the prism
of ordinary human experience? While these are not physiological questions alone, we cannot
is, of how the parts of the body relate to the human whole.
The "brainstem" formulation and the "higher brain" formulation of the definition of death
both challenge the standard paradigm by suggesting that it has not adequately articulated the
basic concept of death. The practical consequence of a successful challenge from either of
these camps would be an expansion-either small or large-of the class of patients considered to
somatic functioning. A third challenge to the standard paradigm is of a much different sort.
Shewmon /37-39/ reports an understanding that has thrown the standard paradigm of the
physiological and philosophical understanding of death into uncertainty. Shewmon /37/ argues
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that that if we accept the definition of death as the loss of integrative function of the organism as
a whole, then we cannot consider brain dead patients to be dead. And, conversely, if we
maintain that brain dead patients are indeed dead, then we must abandon the loss of integrative
Shewmon has shown that neither bodily disintegration nor asystole necessarily follow
imminently after brain death /37/. Over one hundred documented cases demonstrate chronic
survival past a week's time, with one extreme case surviving over 14 years. Furthermore, he
demonstrates that factors such as age, aetiology, and underlying somatic integrity variably
affect the survival probability of brain dead patients. Thus, not only is asystole not necessarily
imminent upon brain death, but also it is the integrity of the rest of the body (the underlying
somatic plasticity) and not the condition of the brain that most strongly influences survival.
Shewmon also argues against the consensus that the somatic disintegration that is
observed in brain dead patients has as its cause the loss of neural regulatory centres; instead,
he presents clinical evidence that dis-integration may be explained by the condition known as
"spinal shock." Spinal shock is a transient condition that occurs following a sudden acute spinal
cord injury, resulting in the temporary loss of function of the spinal region below the lesion. Such
functions may be regained after 2 to 6 weeks, and include autonomic reflexes, sympathetic and
parasympathetic tone, and thermoregulation. In several brain dead patients in whom life-support
is sustained long enough, this loss and subsequent recovery of spinal cord regulation has been
observed /37,38/. Shewmon /39/ builds on these arguments in a 2001 paper that looks directly
at the issue of integration and integrative unity. His philosophical exploration of these notions
leads him to the following conclude that the body has no integrator but rather the holistic
property of integration. In support of this idea, Shewmon discusses the various functions of the
organism that qualify as integrative. Some of these seem to warrant the designation "brain-
mediated," but many others do not. Among those that do not are, for example, wound-healing,
immunological defence of "self" against "non-self," proportional growth, and even successful
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gestation of a foetus. These functions, and many others he names, have been exhibited by at
least some brain dead bodies. Shewmon is careful to point out that calling these functions "non-
brain-mediated" does not mean that the brain has nothing to do with them in an intact organism.
Coma
While the content of consciousness is a function of the higher brain, the capacity for
consciousness resides in the brainstem. The brainstem and the higher brain play an important
role in directing the integrative functions of an organism. Integrative functions are those complex
processes and spontaneous innate activities that involve communication, coordination, and
regulation of several subsystems within the body. Examples include respiration, heartbeat,
and response to light and sound. Yet while some of these integrated functions directly
correspond to a function in the brain (such as the ability to moderate the depth and pace of
breathing), others (such as blood-pressure and body temperature regulation) are less clearly
dependent on the brain's regulation. The extent to which brainstem regulation is necessary for
somatically integrative functioning is a central matter of controversy. Clearly, however, the ability
to behave in an integrative way is the some and substance of the argument to follow. That is
while there may well be profound anatomical compromises to the nervous system, if the
individual’s nervous system can behave in an integrative fashion, then there is no functional
compromise and there is a possibility of recovery through plasticity. This notion will be examined
Laureys and colleagues /20/ had conveniently produced a flow chart relating the
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states. It is understood that critical damage to the reticular system produces coma, defined
both wakefulness and awareness, and exemplified in Figures 1 and 2 above. Critical damage to
the thalamus, cerebral cortex, or its connections, while sparing the reticular system, produces a
vegetative state, in which the patient is awake but unaware. The use of the concept of brain
death is an ambiguous term that cannot be operationally defined and therefore has no place in a
Mollaret and Gouan in 1959 /29/ coined the notion le coma depasse or “state beyond
coma.” The went on to define that state as based on an irreversible loss of the clinical function
of the whole brain, including cortical (upper brain motor and cognitive), mid-brain (integrative),
and brain stem (vegetative) function. The concept of brain death is relatively recent then.
bedside and apnea testing. Table II provides sensitivity and specificity data on additional
confirmatory clinical testing to support a determination of death. Steven Gould best states the
problem with all of these approaches when he noted: We still carry the historical baggage of a
Platonic heritage that seeks sharp essences and definite boundaries. Thus we hope to find an
irreducible continua.
framework from which they conceive of death is the famous story of Mike the Chicken who
survived headless for eighteen months maintaining all bodily functions including sex with a
surviving brainstem.
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Persistent Vegetative State
unconsciousness. In reviewing a recent history of the concept, it was first described by Jennet
and Plum in 1972 /9/. Eyes open unconsciousness is a dissociation between aware and awake
states as diagrammed in Figure 1. The upper brain fails to receive or project information as well
as evidence that exists of a lack of integration between the upper and mid-brain. The brainstem,
however, is generally intact. This would adequately explain Mike’s sexual prowess, but not his
consciousness. In the human condition, this state would be more characteristic of the states of
Again as in coma, the concept of PVS is based on the judgment of a clinician in turn
based on the 1994 Multi Society Task Force on PVS /30/ with the criteria being the
demonstration of sleep-wake cycles without the awareness of self or of others when awake. No
demonstrate limb spasticity, but those movements are likely to be non-purposeful. Reports of
some emotive events have been made including smiles and grimaces but not reproducible
response to stimuli.
The cause of injury, co-morbid conditions and the length of time in the vegetative state
determine the recovery from PVS. “Persistent” is defined as duration of greater than one month
represented in Table III. When the cause in non-traumatic (e.g. anoxic brain injury post CPR), a
duration of greater than three months is termed “permanent.” Duration of greater than 12
months post traumatic injury is considered “permanent” and is represented in Table IV.
One might think that the anatomy itself might define a comatose, persistent, or
permanent vegetative state when one sees an individual who is in that state and has the
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attendant anatomical or structural involvement. Immediately, additional explanations are
indicates a CT of the well-known Terry Schiavo case indicating hydrocephalus and central loss
congenitally hydrocephalic female with an anatomical presentation not significantly distant from
that represented in Figure 5A. Figure 5C represents the same young ladies rCBF indicating
areas of function. The likely functional differences between these two cases are likely the result
of one case being congenital and the other being the result of adult-onset trauma.
In examining the effect on fMRI of temporal lobe function on patients in PVS, Owen
and colleagues /33/ read sentences to an individual 13-months after a stroke. Functional
magnetic resonance imaging revealed bilateral activation in his superior temporal lobes
represented in Figure 6 (top) similar to the activation found in healthy controls (bottom). The
patient later emerged into a minimally conscious state. (From A.M. Owen et al., /33/).
consciousness leading to attempts to objectify various clinical states including PVS and death,
Laureys and colleagues /21/ present in Figure 7 a representation of global cerebral metabolism
in percent as a function of varying clinical states. We learn that PVS has an associated global
metabolism of between 40-65 percent of normal being similar to deep anaesthesia /2/. Then
again, individuals with congenital anencephaly who are of normal intellectual ability demonstrate
The implications of the nature of global cerebral metabolism in PVS includes the fact
that such metabolic hypoactivity has precedent only in deep anaesthesia and supports clinical
evidence that cerebral cognitive function is lost in the vegetative state, leaving a body that can
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no longer think or experience pain according to Levy and colleagues /26/. The pain-suppressing
effect of general anaesthesia is likely due primarily to its depressant effect on brain stem rather
than on cerebral function in coma but not in PVS as the brainstem is functional in PVS. There is
An additional view of why the Shiavo case was functionally different than the case of
in Figure 8. The elevated CMRGlc observed during ages 3-10 yrs. corresponds to an era of
exuberant connectivity that is needed for energy needs of neuronal processes. In childhood it is
measurably greater by a factor of 2 compared to adults. PET scans show the relative glucose
metabolic rate. We see the complexity of dendritic structures of cortical neurons consistent with
the expansion of synaptic connectivities and increases in capillary density in the frontal cortex.
Figure 9 represents the comparison on rCBF in the left superior temporal gyrus
compared with activity in the left prefrontal cortex and demonstrates areas with more “efficient”
connectivity with the auditory cortex in individuals with PVS as compared to those with Minimally
functional disconnectivity and follows from the notion earlier reported by Leisman and
similar to neonatal normal activation and similar to our functional disconnection syndromes (e.g.
autism) /25,38/. There also exists in PVS a non-activation of higher-order association cortices,
with impaired functional connections between distant cortical areas, including the thalamus and
cortical interaction.
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We can actually see these functional disconnectivities in sleep /41/. In sleep, brain
areas loose ability to communicate with each other as compared to awake subjects who create
responses in different destinations unlike sleep subjects who are more likely to create
breakdown into non-coherent activity. Consciousness then could be considered to be the ability
of the brain to integrate information with consciousness being the coherent communication
between brain areas. PVS seems to be a compromise in that integration process. The result is
in some cases that PVS can be seen as a locked-in syndrome with severe cognitive deficits but
reticular formation & thalamus. While it is not known which portions of the brain are responsible
for cognition and consciousness; what little is known points to substantial interconnections
among the brainstem, subcortical structures and the neocortex. Thus, the 'higher brain' may well
exist only as a metaphorical concept, and not in reality. The role of cortex allows for the
interface between world, the individual’s body and the conscious self as well as well as in the
integration of sensory input and motor output. Functional disconnectivities represent the
Sprague Effect. /40/. The complete removal of posterior visual areas of a hemisphere in the cat
(parietal areas too) renders the animal profoundly and permanently unresponsive to visual
stimuli in the half of space contralateral to the cortical tissue removal. The cat is blind in the
same way as would a human with radical damage to the geniculostriatal system. If one were
then inflict additional damage on such a severely impaired animal at midbrain level, then the
ability of the cat to orient and localize stimuli in the formerly blind field would be restored. This
the central portion of the collicular commissure. Adding damage in the brainstem to the cortical
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damage “cures” a behavioural effect of massive cortical damage. The Sprague Effect is a
removal. The damage deprives the ipsilateral superior colliculus of its normal cortical input.
Damage unbalances collicular function via indirect projection pathways, those chiefly from the
substantia nigra to the colliculus, which crosses the midline in a narrow central portion of the
collicular commissure. The “restorative” interventions partially correct this imbalance, allowing
the collicular mechanism to resume at least part of its normal functional contribution to
behaviour, with partial restoration of vision as a result. Minimally Conscious States (MCS)
To make the diagnosis of MCS, limited but clearly discernible evidence of self or
all of the following including: following simple commands, gestural or verbal yes/no responses
affective behaviors that occur in contingent relation to relevant environmental stimuli and are not
due to reflexive activity. Some examples of qualifying purposeful behavior include: appropriate
smiling or crying in response to the linguistic or visual content of emotional but not to neutral
topics or stimuli, vocalizations or gestures that occur in direct response to the linguistic content
of questions, reaching for objects that demonstrates a clear relationship between object location
and direction of reach, touching or holding objects in a manner that accommodates the size and
shape of the object, pursuit eye movement or sustained fixation that occurs in direct response to
moving or salient stimuli. Although it is not uncommon for individuals in MCS to demonstrate
more than one of the above criteria, in some patients the evidence is limited to only one
consciousness depend on inferences drawn from observed behavior. Thus, sensory deficits,
which the upper boundary is necessarily arbitrary. Consequently, the diagnostic criteria for
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emergence from MCS are based on broad classes of functionally useful behaviors that are
typically observed as such patients recover. Thus, emergence from MCS is characterized by
reliable and consistent demonstration of one or both of the following: Functional interactive
may occur through verbalization, writing, yes/no signals, or use of augmentative, communication
devices. Functional use of objects requires that the patient demonstrate behavioral evidence of
object discrimination.
Giacino /6/ has distinguished the MCS from the PVS by the presence of behaviours
behaviour. The reproducibility of such evidence is affected by the consistency and complexity of
with and additional gedanken experiment this time on elucidating the nature of MCS /25/ with
deep brain stimulation. Electrodes receive pulses from pacemaker surgically placed /36/ under
the skin of patient’s chest. Electrodes transmitted pulses from pacemaker to thalamus, for 12
hours after which the patient became significantly more alert and aware and had the capacity to
express pain return. The patient reportedly kept his eyes open most of the time during the day
and followed others with his eyes as they moved. The MCS patient, according to Schiff and
colleagues communicated reliably with gestures and audible phrases of up to six words. He also
Schiff and colleagues have assumed and we support the notion that widespread loss of
cerebral connectivity is assumed to underlie the failure of brain mechanisms that support
communication and goal-directed behaviour following severe traumatic brain injury. We had
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indicated earlier in Tables III and IV that disorders of consciousness that persist for longer than
improve functional outcome. Schiff and colleagues have shown otherwise Recent studies have
indicating residual functional capacity in some patients that could be supported by therapeutic
demonstrated that in a 6-month double-blind alternating crossover study, bilateral deep brain
patient who remained in MCS for 6 years following traumatic brain injury before the intervention.
The frequency of specific cognitively mediated behaviours (primary outcome measures) and
functional limb control and oral feeding (secondary outcome measures) increased during
periods in which DBS was on as compared with periods in which it was off. Logistic regression
modelling demonstrated a statistical linkage between the observed functional improvements and
In attempting to portray consciousness, thinking and memory and its skills as we have
elsewhere, /23,14-16/ we could easily demonstrate how imaging technologies show brain
locations appearing to correlate with consciousness, although not directly responsible for it. This
We have theorized earlier about how neural firings lead to thoughts and feelings /5/.
approaches argue that neurons and their synapses are the fundamental units of information in
the brain, and that conscious experience emerges when a critical level of complexity is reached
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In our previous thinking, we have examined activity waves in a layered neural
continuum. With arborization facilitating synaptic connectivities, upon stimulation, Neural cells
become active and trigger excitatory and inhibitory signals through synaptic connectivities. If a
given cell receives a sufficient preponderance of excitatory over inhibitory synaptic inputs it fires
physics, and biology concerning neurons and their connections. This stems from the dual
emulating its aspects artificially. The latter effort has achieved some success, /7,18/ but
progress in the larger endeavor has been slower, up against the size discrepancy between
4 9 11
artificial neural networks (about 10 cells at most /42/ and mammalian brains (10 -10 cells)
/10,44/. It is clear that the type of analysis used to design, for example, conditionable pattern
recognizers must be supplemented by an approach that can account for the organization of
Our model of consciousness as a basis for a definition of death does not conceive, as
do other theories, especially neural network models, that the mind is a computer-like entity.
Other models dealing with interconnectivities omit details including: widespread apparent
randomness at all levels of neural processes (is it really noise, or underlying levels of
complexity?); glial cells account for approximately 80 percent of the brain; the effects of
cytoplasmic/cytoskeletal activities. Single cell paramecia swim & avoid obstacles with their
cytocytoskeletons for example. Neuronal complexity is generally not accounted for. Many motile
single-celled organisms lacking neurons swim, find food, learn, & multiply through internal
cytoskeleton and the brain’s living state (the brain is alive!). Invariably, no threshold or rationale
called continuum neural dynamics, was first proposed by Wilson and Cowan /44/. They stated
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that a differential element of neural tissue (which in the continuum approximation still contains
many cells) could be characterized completely by the connections it has with other such
to the elements, neurons themselves can be replaced by figurative "cells” which are of two
species, "excitatory" (e-cells), and "inhibitory" (i-cells). Then neural activity on the macroscopic
level is described by a field variable A(s,x,t) (s = e,i), which is the active fraction of species s at
Connections are of four types, viz. e-e, e-i, i-e, i-i, where in each case the first-named
is the afferent or pre-synaptic species and the second is the efferent or post-synaptic species;
these connections are probabilistic, the probabilities decreasing with distance. (It is essential to
this theory that the probabilities and their spatial ranges be different for the different connection
types). The activity field A obeys an integro-differential equation /13/, which expresses the fact
that the change in activity in a region of the continuum is a nonlinear (i.e. sigmoid) function of
synaptic input. This in turn is proportional to the algebraic sum of the activity in all other regions,
We consider here the application of this theory to a model, which we believe is a first
approximation of cortical tissue. It consists of two identical layers, each containing both types of
cell. Connections between cells in different layers are subject to a time delay without dissipation.
The presence of e-e connections denotes a source of free energy in the medium, which can
thus be described as "active." Active media amplify small signals, and this work concerns itself
with determining the characteristics of disturbances that are preferentially amplified, the "fastest-
Because the signals under consideration are initially small, a linear analysis suffices;
the growing disturbances can then be described in terms of waves. For example, for relatively
small delay the response of the two-layer system to an impulsive (delta-function) stimulus at one
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of the layers is a growing, propagating wave with narrowly determined wavelength and
frequency. As delay increases the structure of the response becomes more complex, with two
or more such waves being simultaneously excited. The delay acts as a control, determining both
the spectral location of the resonances and the qualitative nature of the response /27/. The
preferentially amplified wavelengths are always large compared with the synaptic connection
ranges.
Linear theory predicts that growth proceeds without limit. Therefore limitation to the
growth must come from factors outside the theory. Nonlinear saturation, which has been studied
to some extent /1,5,11-13,18,44/ is one possible limiting factor. It suits our purposes instead to
postulate that growth at a particular wavelength stops when the delay time changes, so that
growth at that wavelength is no longer favored. (The presence of a uniform decay ensures
the disappearance of non-growing disturbances.) A change in delay, over times long compared
with itself (and the periods of the resonant waves), can come about if the delay results from
Karl Pribram's holonomic theory reviews evidence that the dendritic processes function
information is stored distributed over large numbers of neurons. When the episode is
from each other by a multiple of some currently favored wavelength. At small delays this large-
scale organization by wavelength is reproducible as a function of delay only. For larger delays,
phase relations among the several activated modes cause the details of the resonant pattern to
be functions as well of the spatiotemporal location of the initial signal. The elements under
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discussion contain enough cells to be complex neural networks, and a single "neural cascade”
The Figures 13 and 14 depict how resonantly growing waves simultaneously activate
distant modules into patterns of greater or lesser complexity. These patterns, the normal
modes of our model of cortical tissue, may well be expressions of "mental" phenomena. For
example, consider a case where the modules contain feature-recognition information. At low
delays, when a single wavelength is resonantly excited, modules spaced at a distance equal to
an integral multiple of the resonant wavelength will be simultaneously active or inactive. They
can thus represent information that associates perhaps a face a voice and a name. A memory
search then would involve changing the delay until the correct pattern is achieved.
As previously indicated, the longer the delay remains constant, the greater the
exponential growth in the proportion of cells firing that is the number recruited into the search.
Note that the figures depict the response to a single small local disturbance; there is no reason
functional disconnectivity between parts of the system. Several disturbances separated from
each other in space and time can give rise to a pattern more like a standing than a propagating
wave. Growing standing waves may be useful in explaining "Tip-of-the-Tongue” and related
phenomena in relatively normal situation and conditions such as persistent vegetative states or
minimally conscious states in more egregious compromises to the status of brain functional
integration.
When the delay is such that several wavelengths are simultaneously resonant, the
location of the original disturbance is significant, since the phase relations among the excited
waves in any particular region lead to interference patterns. For example at T = 1.25 (see Figure
5d), there are several adjacent modules simultaneously active near x = 150 and t = 25. Since
the spatial origin of the figure represents the disturbance location, change in this location would
21
change the position at which the large activity occurs. It is not far-fetched to draw a connection
between this feature of the theory and the Proustian observation that memories of the same
experience are never exactly the same. Furthermore, in the cortex, which can be represented
by six layers /19/, there are in general six waves that can be activated, so that the number of
possible simultaneous resonances is larger than depicted here. This allows for enough
The sudden "insight" shown by Kohler's /17/ chimpanzee, that put together a platform
and a stick to retrieve a banana inaccessible with either alone can be explained by the
simultaneous activation of resonant patterns representing the two pieces of the puzzle. For this
disturbance location and its effect on the positions of the interference patterns. In general large
delay with its consequent complication of the resonant pattern is likely to be a favorable
condition for such "creative thinking" to occur and its opposite for functional disconnectivities.
The assumption that the delay changes before nonlinear effects set in is an expression
of the familiar mental phenomenon of shifting attention. The wave forms in Figure (5) terminate
at t = 30 decay periods, at which time the maximum amplitude shown is about 500 times the
amplitude of the initial delta function disturbance. By then the wave has propagated about 200
excitatory connection lengths from the point of disturbance, so that about 107 cells /43/, 0.1 to 1
percent of the (two-layer) cortex /26/, have been involved. This is reasonable for a typical
"mind moment."
In connection with attention shifts, we point out that in previous work /11-16/ we have
modeled the attentional center of the brain, and concluded that it communicates with the higher
disconnectivities reflect impairment in that spatial frequency signal or signals. We speculate that
shifts in attention occur as the delay in the cortex adjusts itself so that one of the cortical
22
resonant wavelengths is equal to the wavelength of the attentional signal. The inability to
Although we think that we can explain much of the problems of consciousness in the
propagation, a number of problems immediately arise in being able to use such a paradigm in
creating a bounded continuum with death on one end of the spectrum and possibly hypervigilant
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26
LEGEND
Figure 1: Quantifiable Altered States. Neural activity (EEG’s) and the corresponding behavioral
states accompanying arousal levels including those associated with an awake excited person,
the alpha rhythm associated with relaxation with eyes closed, the slowing in frequency
associated with a drowsy condition, the slow high amplitude waves of sleep, the larger slow
waves associated with deep sleep, and the further slowing of EEG waves associated with coma.
Figure 2: Clinical Levels of of Arousal and Awareness [after Laureys et al. /20/] Figure 3: Clinically
Figure 4: Although most of his head was in a jar, most of his brain stem and one ear was left. Since
most chicken reflex actions are controlled by the brainstem, Mike was able to remain quite
healthy. In the 18 months that Mike lived since beheading he grew from 2 1/2 lbs. to nearly 8
lbs.
Figure 5: Does the Anatomy Define the PVS or is there a case for plasticity? (A) (left) CT of normal
brain (right) Terry Schiavo's 2002 CT showing hydrocephalus & loss of brain tissue. (B) CT of
Figure 7: Global cerebral metabolism as a function of state of consciousness [after Laureys et al.
/16/].
Figure 10 Imaging technologies show brain locations appearing to correlate with consciousness but
perhaps not directly responsible for it. Technology reveals brain activity associated with
consciousness but is that activity equivalent to it. Figure 11: Electrophysiological consequences
of consciousness as a function of increasing levels of system complexity. Is this how and when
27
Figures 12: The Neural continuum (A) As we zoom out, our field of vision contains more and more,
seemingly smaller and smaller cells. Eventually the distinctions among the individual cells blur.
We /1-5/ have analyzed the properties of the material as a neural continuum. (B) Schematic of
simplified cortical model: Two layers each consisting of excitatory and inhibitory cells. Synaptic
connections within a layer are instantaneous; those between layers are subject to a (variable)
uniformity where the connection probabilities, ranges, time delays depend on axial or interlayer
distance only. The neural continuum can be described as an assembly of cells, either purely
excitatory (e-species) or purely inhibitory (i-species). The cells of each species within a
continuum element send their respective collective signals to the other elements.
Communications between the individual cells are provided by axons. Although many of these
axons are quite long, their average length is less than 1 mm. In the continuum approximation
this fact is represented by a mean connection range, over which the probability of connection
Figure 13: The neural medium contains stored electro-chemical energy and therefore can be
described as active. Under a wide range of conditions, neural tissue amplifies initially small
increments in collective neuronal activity; when this occurs, the amplified signal takes the
spatio-temporal form of waves, and the amplification occurs at selected wavelengths. In our
model the delay time T is the parameter most instrumental in determining the dominant wave or
waves, whose wavelengths are about an order of magnitude greater than the average synaptic
connection ranges. In our model the delay time T is the parameter most instrumental in
determining the dominant wave or waves, whose wavelengths are about an order of magnitude
greater than the average synaptic connection ranges. In this figure we see the spatiotemporal
response of the model in Figure 3B to a unit impulsive stimulus to one layer at lateral position x
= 0 and time t = 0. (Distances are normalized to the excitatory connection range and times to
the uniform neural activity decay rate.) The response of the stimulated layer is shown for
28
various values of interlayer time delay T: (a) T = 0.50, (b) T = 0.75, (c) T = 1.00, (d) T = 1.25,
(e) T = 1.50, (f) T = 1.75. To avoid showing the infinite (delta function) stimulus, the earliest
time shown is t = 0.5. For purposes of scaling, the graphs in this figure terminate at t = 15.
The response at later times are shown in Figure 5. Parameters are given in Koch and Leisman
1996 /14/.
Figure 14: Spatiotemporal response of the model in Figure 3B to a unit impulsive stimulus to one
layer at lateral position x = 0 and time t = 0. (Distances are normalized to the excitatory
connection range and times to the uniform neural activity decay rate.) The response of the
stimulated layer is shown for various values of interlayer time delay T: (a) T = 0.50, (b) T = 0.75,
(c) T = 1.00, (d) T = 1.25, (e) T = 1.50, (f) T = 1.75. For purposes of scaling, the graphs in this
figure start at t = 15. Parameters are given in Koch and Leisman 1996 /14/.
Figure 15: The total activity within a lateral region of the model in Figure 3B caused by a unit
impulsive stimulus at time t = 0, as a function of distance L of the boundary of the region from
the location of the impulse. (Distances are normalized to the excitatory connection range and
times to the uniform neural activity decay rate.) The response of the stimulated layer between
times t = 11 and t = 26 is shown for two values of interlayer time delay T: (a) T = 0.50, (b) T =
29
TABLE I
Clinical Brain Death Testing Protocol Synopsis
30
TABLE II
31
TABLE III
1-Year Outcome in Post-Traumatic Vegetative State
32
Table IV
33
TABLE V
Anatomic Injury, Functional Injury, and Suffering
34
Figure 1
35
Figure 2
36
Figure 3
37
Figure 4
38
Figure 5 (A)
39
Figure 5 (B)
40
Figure 5 (C)
41
Figure 6
42
Figure 7
43
Figure 8
44
Figure 9
45
Figure 10
46
Figure 11
47
Figure 12 (A)
48
Figure 12 (B)
49
Figure 13
50
Figure 13 (cont.)
51
Figure 14
52
Figure 14 (cont.)
53
Figure 15
54