Author:
Kronemer Sharif I.,Aksen Mark,Ding Julia,Ryu Jun Hwan,Xin Qilong,Ding Zhaoxiong,Prince Jacob S.,Kwon Hunki,Khalaf Aya,Forman Sarit,Jin David,Wang Kevin,Chen Kaylie,Hu Claire,Agarwal Akshar,Saberski Erik,Wafa Syed Mohammad Adil,Morgan Owen P.,Wu Jia,Christison-Lagay Kate L.,Hasulak Nicholas,Morrell Martha,Urban Alexandra,Constable R. Todd,Pitts Michael,Richardson R. Mark,Crowley Michael J.,Blumenfeld Hal
Abstract
AbstractConsciousness is not explained by a single mechanism, rather it involves multiple specialized neural systems overlapping in space and time. We hypothesize that synergistic, large-scale subcortical and cortical attention and signal processing networks encode conscious experiences. To identify brain activity in conscious perception without overt report, we classified visual stimuli as perceived or not using eye measurements. Report-independent event-related potentials and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) signals both occurred at early times after stimuli. Direct recordings revealed a novel thalamic awareness potential linked to conscious visual perception based on report. fMRI showed thalamic and cortical detection, arousal, attentional salience, task-positive, and default mode networks were involved independent of overt report. These findings identify a specific sequence of neural mechanisms in human conscious visual perception.One-Sentence SummaryHuman conscious visual perception engages large-scale subcortical and cortical networks even without overt report.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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