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The temporally-integrated causality landscape: A theoretical framework for consciousness and meaning
Affiliation:2. Stroke and Cardiac Services, New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York;3. Quality and Systems Improvement, American Heart Association/American Stroke Association, Robbinsville, New Jersey;4. Performance Improvement and Patient Safety, University North Carolina Hospitals, Chapel Hill, North Carolina;6. Research Design Associates, Yorktown Heights, New York;5. Department of Neurology, University Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York
Abstract:Theoretical approaches to understanding consciousness have begun to converge upon areas of general agreement, yet substantive differences remain. Here, I introduce a new theoretical framework for the emergence of consciousness from the functional integration of the thalamocortical system: the Temporally-Integrated Causality Landscape (TICL). TICL presents a novel perspective which addresses important phenomenological characteristics of consciousness that other frameworks, such as IIT, do not. First, the TICL is based upon the observation that conscious experiences are temporally continuous, not discrete. Secondly, the TICL establishes a thalamocortical basis for the point-of-view. According to TICL, consciousness is composed of contents that arise from neuronal subsystems that have meaning from the point-of-view of the larger, integrated system in which they are nested. Meaningful contents emerge from the subsystems because they exhibit a level of temporally-integrated causality (TIC) that is distinguishable from that of the larger system.
Keywords:Consciousness  Neural correlates of consciousness  Integrated information theory  Global neuronal workspace  Cerebral cortex
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