@jaanaru @jiahongbo @NicoleCRust @Neurograce @wandell @anilkseth @DrYohanJohn @PessoaBrain @ShahabBakht @jerlich @LeslieKay
Nicole, you started out asking about complexity measures of consciousness. Anyone interested in this has to absorb Scott Aaronson's critique of IIT: https://scottaaronson.blog/?p=1799
He shows that the IIT measure does not even come close to isolating what we think we mean when we separate the conscious from the unconscious. The punch line is:
"More generally, we can achieve pretty good information integration by hooking together logic gates according to any bipartite expander graph: that is, any graph with n vertices on each side, such that every k vertices on the left side are connected to at least min{(1+ε)k,n} vertices on the right side, for some constant ε>0. And it’s well-known how to create expander graphs whose degree (i.e., the number of edges incident to each vertex, or the number of wires coming out of each logic gate) is a constant, such as 3. One can do so either by plunking down edges at random, or (less trivially) by explicit constructions from algebra or combinatorics. And as indicated in the title of this post, I feel 100% confident in saying that the so-constructed expander graphs are not conscious! The brain might be an expander, but not every expander is a brain."
Tononi, to his credit or blame, is so committed to IIT that his response is yes, such an arrangement of logic gates is conscious. But I think that pretty much destroys any connection of what he calls consciousness to what the rest of us are referring to when we use that term.
I don't doubt that there is some sense in which conscious brains are functionally in more complex states than unconscious brains. And that it might be possible to characterize this difference in ways that are, say, clinically meaningful in identifying awareness in locked-in patients. I have no idea how effective any of the existing measures are at this, or how unique they are in being effective (if they are), or whether, if they do the job, they are about as simple as any criterion that could do the job can be. I don't even know if these questions have been asked. At any rate, these are practical issues.
But the idea that one proclaims a theory, writes down an expression for complexity and proclaims that is the alchemical formula for consciousness -- well, that's just silly. I think that completely misunderstands what a theory is.
I'll also add that I agree with several people above (@neurograce, @DrYohanJohn, probably others) that the "hard problem of consciousness" -- why do objective arrangements of matter create subjective experience -- is not a question science can answer. Science is a process of distilling out the objective, measurable, reproducible. It can tell us all about the structures of neural activity that enter consciousness and create its contents, the NCCs. Maybe when we understand this and get used to it the hard problem won't seem so interesting or bothersome. Maybe it will seem natural that *that* kind of neural activity enters conscious awareness. Maybe the mystery will seem to disappear. But all science can tell us about are the objective structures and their correlations with subjective experience. Not why cold dead matter organized intro energy-consuming, reproducing (living) entities can, in some cases, produce subjective awareness.
#neuroscience @cogneurophys