Psychology, Research, Science

Brain entropy

NEUROSCIENCE

Intro: A new research study helps to measure levels of consciousness

“OUR brains produce more entropy when we are awake than when we are asleep.” The finding from a research study could lead to better ways to measure the consciousness of people who appear to be in a coma.

Entropy is a measure of disorder, and in our universe, everything tends to move from less disorder to more over time. For instance, breaking a coffee cup increases entropy. While this breaking can happen in many ways, you never see a broken cup spontaneously reassemble itself and therefore decrease its entropy.

Electrical signals in our brains can also produce entropy as part of processing and transmitting information, such as the visual signals from our eyes. Researchers at the Paris-Saclay University in France wanted to determine whether our brains produce more entropy when we are awake or when we are asleep.

The scientists used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to scan the brains of 15 people in different states of consciousness: while each person was awake and in three stages of sleep, from light to very deep.

To calculate entropy, the research team used a model that was previously developed from studying the pathways that electrical signals can follow inside of the brain. The different routes help reveal the different processes they can carry out, and each of those processes produces different amounts of entropy. From this, the researchers calculated entropy production for each person in each state of consciousness. The findings suggest that entropy decreases as people fall deeper into sleep. In the state of deepest sleep, people’s brains, on average, produced 25 per cent less entropy than when they were awake.

This now gives researchers and scientists a way to quantify consciousness. A person whose brain shows the same amount of entropy production in an fMRI study as someone who is deeply asleep is likely to have the same types of processes happening in their brain and to be at a similar level of consciousness.

This new method could potentially be used to quantify the consciousness of people in comas or eventually help to diagnose people with locked-in syndrome, who are conscious but unable to communicate with the external world.

Previous research has linked consciousness to entropy. Some fMRI studies, for example, have indicated that states of very altered consciousness, such as those induced by psychedelic substances like psilocybin, result in an increase in entropy of the brain itself – meaning that it is harder to predict its overall electrical state – and not just the entropy different signals produce.

Understanding the state of awareness of people that are minimally conscious has long been an area of scientific study. However, it isn’t yet clear that entropy production is an unambiguous mark of consciousness.

For example, dreams can happen in deep sleep – a time of low entropy – but they reflect a high level of consciousness. As such, dreams could actually increase entropy production in the brain, but the study carried out by researchers didn’t consider this.

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Philosophy, Science

Can Consciousness Be Explained By Science?

NEURO & COGNITIVE SCIENCE

Intro: One of the most notoriously difficult problems in science to crack is, rather ironically, the one that is closest to home. This is the challenge of understanding our own consciousness.

Put simply, understanding our own consciousness involves finding an answer to the apparently intractable question of how the chemical and neurological processes occurring within our bodies lead to the senses of perception and awareness with which we experience the world around us. Up until relatively recently, scientists as a whole were reluctant to engage with the subject of consciousness, preferring to leave it entirely to philosophers. The religions of the world and the ancient Greek philosophers were prepared to address the issue, but the first to consider what has become known as the mind-body problem in a modern philosophical sense was René Descartes in the first half of the seventeenth century. He argued that the mind was not a physical entity and that it was separated from the body, which he described as being like a machine that was controlled by the mind. Cartesian dualism, as this view is called, proved to be enormously influential and was one of the reasons why scientists were reluctant to get involved with the question, because, if the mind is non-physical, then it cannot be studied using empirical methods.

One way of overcoming the problem created by Cartesian dualism is to reject the idea that the mind and body are separate in the first place. This is known as monism and, in one form or another, is largely the position taken by most philosophers of the mind today, together with those scientists who are prepared to engage with the philosophical aspects of the study of consciousness. The way in which philosophers describe the concept of monism is a great deal more complicated and involved than is described here, but it at least provides a philosophical stance by which consciousness can be investigated, even if it does not actually advance that study very much on its own.

The Hard Problem

Over the past few decades, philosophers and scientists have begun to engage with each other more fully than in the past, in the realisation that moving the study of consciousness forward will most likely require input from both sides, and perhaps even an entirely new way of approaching the subject. In part, this involves specifying exactly which questions science is attempting to answer. One of the best-known examples of this has been provided by the Australian philosopher David Chalmers, who distinguishes between what he calls the easy problems and the hard problem of consciousness. The easy problems are those which can be addressed by science as it stands, and concern those processes occurring in the brain and central nervous system which can be detected and measured – or, at least, may well be in the not-too-distant future, as the technology to investigate such mechanisms advances. Examples include how memories are created, stored and retrieved, and how our brains deal with a situation in which we are required to make a decision. In both cases it is possible to monitor what is happening in the brain, but much more difficult to understand how these changes relate to the phenomenon of being conscious.

The hard problem is much the same as the mind-body problem, in that it involves explaining how the physical processes of the brain result in consciousness. According to Chalmers, it is distinct from the easy problems because it requires an explanation of a subjective experience that is unique to the individual having that experience. One way of thinking about it was articulated by the American philosopher Thomas Nagel, who posed the question, “What is it like to be a bat?” We have, of course, not the slightest idea of what it would be like – the point being that if were able to work out all the electrochemical processes going on in a bat’s brain, we might get to know a great deal more about bats than we do now. However, we would still have no idea what it is like to experience the world from a bat’s point of view.

Not all philosophers accept that the hard problem exists in the way Chalmers and Nagel suggest – among them Daniel Dennett, who argues that, as neuroscience increases our knowledge of how the brain works, we are gradually getting closer to understanding consciousness, even if there is a long way to go. This has been likened to a computer engineer assembling a computer from its constituent parts, so that once it is put together correctly and switched on, it will become apparent how the internal structure relates to the overall functioning of the computer. Needless to say, we are nowhere near understanding how all the functions of the brain work, but if this analogy proves to be accurate, then at least there is a possibility that we will be able to unravel one of the great mysteries of science at some point in the future.

Alternative Theories

At the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the Italian neuroscientist Giulio Tononi has been working on a theory of what consciousness actually is and how it can be measured. This is called the integrated information theory, which, rather than attempting to understand how the functioning of the brain leads to consciousness, takes the approach of starting with consciousness to identify its properties and, from there, working out what physical mechanisms are necessary to account for those properties. According to Tononi, two of the principal properties needed for a system to be conscious are that it receives information and that it integrates that information together into a unified whole.

Clearly there are more aspects to consciousness, but here we have the beginnings of a way in which it can be quantified and studied. This may ultimately lead to a full or much better understanding of what consciousness is.

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