It seems like what Tononi is getting at is that human experience cannot be modeled on a computer precisely because we can't erase it willingly. I'd be interested to know what he makes of HM and other patients with various kinds of amnesia. EDIT: Because I feel compelled to go a little more in depth: Is 'leaking out' really the best way to describe it, though? There are a few interesting theories of forgetting such as trace decay and interference theories. Given that we're not sure exactly how forgetting works, is Tononi jumping the gun? Tononi's a big shot and well established so I'll tread carefully, but that doesn't mean he's bulletproof. The electronic nose doesn't have connections to an electronic thalamic dorsomedial nucleus (which would go to an electronic association cortex) or an electronic amygdala, which are places the olfactory bulb goes to. Which brings up an odd question: can we program an amygdala? I'm going out on a limb here, but consumer operating systems, for example, come with a mechanism for this deletion built into the programming. Ours don't. It's not evolutionarily advantageous. The brain has a hilarious amount of integration compared to computers, too, and has had a whopping 4 billion years to evolve from our single-celled ancestors. Computers don't need to be able to learn that that smell over in that direction is a lion and that the lion needs to be fled from. Computers have also been around a few hundred years at most by the broadest definitions of the word, acted on by human minds and not the indifferent, undirected forces of natural selection. The reconstruction of the original experience is almost always distorted to a degree. I think this is the key argument. This is pure speculation on my part, but maybe the mathematics required to compute consciousness are simply beyond our world's capabilities at the moment and the discoveries are lurking around the corner after we make a few intermediate ones.Today, Phil Maguire at the National University of Ireland and a few pals take this mathematical description even further. These guys make some reasonable assumptions about the way information can leak out of a consciousness system and show that this implies that consciousness is not computable. In other words, consciousness cannot be modelled on a computer.
Maguire and co begin with a couple of thought experiments that demonstrate the nature of integrated information in Tononi’s theory. They start by imagining the process of identifying chocolate by its smell. For a human, the conscious experience of smelling chocolate is unified with everything else that a person has smelled (or indeed seen, touched, heard and so on). This is entirely different from the process of automatically identifying chocolate using an electronic nose, which measures many different smells and senses chocolate when it picks out the ones that match some predefined signature.
A key point here is that it would be straightforward to access the memory in an electronic nose and edit the information about its chocolate experience. You could delete this with the press of a button. But ask a neuroscientist to do the same for your own experience of the smell of chocolate—to somehow delete this—and he or she would be faced with an impossible task since the experience is correlated with many different parts of the brain.
The brain, say Maguire and co, must work like this when integrating information from a conscious experience. It must allow the reconstruction of the original experience but without storing all the parts.
The laws of physics are computable, as far as we know. So critics might ask how the process of consciousness can take place at all if it is non-computable. Critics might even say this is akin to saying that consciousness is in some way supernatural, like magic. But Maguire and go counter this by saying that their theory doesn’t imply that consciousness is objectively non-computable only subjectively so.
There is something of a card trick about this argument. In mathematics, the idea of non-computability is not observer-dependent so it seems something of a stretch to introduce it as an explanation. What’s more, critics might point to other weaknesses in the formulation of this problem. For example, the proof that conscious experience is non-computable depends critically on the assumption that our memories are non-lossy. But everyday experience is surely the opposite—our brains lose most of the information that we experience consciously. And the process of repeatedly accessing memories can cause them to change and degrade. Isn’t the experience of forgetting a face of a known person well documented? Then again, critics of Maguire and co’s formulation of the problem of consciousness must not lose sight of the bigger picture—that the debate about consciousness can occur on a mathematical footing at all. That’s indicative of a sea change in this most controversial of fields.
Please explain, then, how the consciousness of coma patients continues to exist without any of those inputs. And before you break out the tired "ah, yes, this is the brain synthesizing consciousness in the absence of said inputs, much like the way one hallucinates under sensory deprivation" please explain how the consciousness of briefly brain dead patients continues through their brain death. I've read into most of the modern theories of consciousness and they don't hold water when compared to our anecdotal, experiencial understanding of consciousness. We'll get there, but not until the scientific community experiences a massive paradigm shift.So each instant of consciousness integrates the smells, sounds and sights of that moment of experience. And consciousness is simply the feeling of this integrated information experience.
Many specific parts of the brain, and many non-specific parts of the brain, as well as parts that have nothing to do with the brain. The problem is that we see consciousness as a function of the brain, when it is not. It's a function of the organism, and perhaps, by extension, of the universe. No one can explain all of the anecdotal anomalies of consciousness (certainly there are many others besides just the ones you mention), because there's no working, accurate model of consciousness to begin with.But ask a neuroscientist to do the same for your own experience of the smell of chocolate—to somehow delete this—and he or she would be faced with an impossible task since the experience is correlated with many different parts of the brain.
What parts outside the brain are you referencing? The only way we can sense anything going on outside our brain is if we have a sensory apparatus transducing information from it and sending information up to our brain, and our experience of the smell of chocolate is no different - we have our olfactory nerve taking in the smell, our pyriform cortex processing it, and supplemental areas such as the hippocampus, amygdala, and association areas integrating it with our memories and emotions. If you're talking about memory, the current consensus is that it's distributed over the entire brain and is manifested in synapse changes, last I heard (motor learning especially, as it goes from requiring a lot of motor cortical involvement to being controlled by the spinal cord in many instances - cats can walk with support even after you transect their brain just above the brainstem). But it is a brain thing. From Wikipedia: In general, the more emotionally charged an event or experience is, the better it is remembered; this phenomenon is known as the memory enhancement effect. Patients with amygdala damage, however, do not show a memory enhancement effect.[33][34] Hebb distinguished between short-term and long-term memory. He postulated that any memory that stayed in short-term storage for a long enough time would be consolidated into a long-term memory. Later research showed this to be false. Research has shown that direct injections of cortisol or epinephrine help the storage of recent experiences. This is also true for stimulation of the amygdala. This proves that excitement enhances memory by the stimulation of hormones that affect the amygdala. Excessive or prolonged stress (with prolonged cortisol) may hurt memory storage. Patients with amygdalar damage are no more likely to remember emotionally charged words than nonemotionally charged ones. The hippocampus is important for explicit memory. The hippocampus is also important for memory consolidation. The hippocampus receives input from different parts of the cortex and sends its output out to different parts of the brain also. The input comes from secondary and tertiary sensory areas that have processed the information a lot already. Hippocampal damage may also cause memory loss and problems with memory storage.Brain areas involved in the neuroanatomy of memory such as the hippocampus, the amygdala, the striatum, or the mammillary bodies are thought to be involved in specific types of memory. For example, the hippocampus is believed to be involved in spatial learning and declarative learning, while the amygdala is thought to be involved in emotional memory.[32] Damage to certain areas in patients and animal models and subsequent memory deficits is a primary source of information. However, rather than implicating a specific area, it could be that damage to adjacent areas, or to a pathway traveling through the area is actually responsible for the observed deficit. Further, it is not sufficient to describe memory, and its counterpart, learning, as solely dependent on specific brain regions. Learning and memory are attributed to changes in neuronal synapses, thought to be mediated by long-term potentiation and long-term depression.
The consciousness of coma patients doesn't continue to exist because coma patients are, basically, unconscious. You may be thinking of individuals in a vegetative state, who exhibit varying degrees of it, but for various well-defined reasons cannot translate inner experience into outer expression. There is no such thing as a briefly brain dead patient, either. There is a specific definition of brain death that has to be observed using specific clinical symptoms, and brain death is permanent by virtue of the signs used in its diagnosis. You may be thinking of people who meet the clinical definition of death temporarily and who are revived. In that case, their brains are often doing some very interesting things with their lack of oxygen. (I have experienced a smaller version of this; I am prone to hypotensive states if I overexert myself or get blood drawn and I experience some really bizarre symptoms because blood is not getting to the parts of my brain that it needs to get to.) I think the issue with dealing with our anecdotal, experiential understanding of consciousness - c.f. why do we see the low end of the electromagnetic spectrum that we can see as red - is that we put too much emphasis on 'oh, we see it as red and not purple' and neglect the fact that this is how our brain is making sense of the difference between two wavelengths (and how about people who have different kinds of colorblindness? Surely the qualia people have considered that there are people who can't distinguish red and green). I mean, fundamentally our brains are electrical meat and there should be nothing mystical about it. EDIT: RationalWiki on qualia - http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Qualia
I've been around, just unsure what the TAA website is going to be at the moment. Mostly been working on a book that I want to finish by August.