Turku PET Centre, University of Turku and Turku University Hospital, FI-20521 Turku, Finland.
J Neurosci. 2012 Apr 4;32(14):4935-43. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4962-11.2012.
One of the greatest challenges of modern neuroscience is to discover the neural mechanisms of consciousness and to explain how they produce the conscious state. We sought the underlying neural substrate of human consciousness by manipulating the level of consciousness in volunteers with anesthetic agents and visualizing the resultant changes in brain activity using regional cerebral blood flow imaging with positron emission tomography. Study design and methodology were chosen to dissociate the state-related changes in consciousness from the effects of the anesthetic drugs. We found the emergence of consciousness, as assessed with a motor response to a spoken command, to be associated with the activation of a core network involving subcortical and limbic regions that become functionally coupled with parts of frontal and inferior parietal cortices upon awakening from unconsciousness. The neural core of consciousness thus involves forebrain arousal acting to link motor intentions originating in posterior sensory integration regions with motor action control arising in more anterior brain regions. These findings reveal the clearest picture yet of the minimal neural correlates required for a conscious state to emerge.
现代神经科学面临的最大挑战之一是发现意识的神经机制,并解释它们如何产生意识状态。我们通过用麻醉剂人为改变志愿者的意识水平,并使用正电子发射断层扫描的局部脑血流成像来观察大脑活动的变化,以此来寻找人类意识的潜在神经基础。我们选择了研究设计和方法,将意识的状态相关变化与麻醉药物的影响区分开来。我们发现,通过对口头命令做出运动反应来评估意识的出现,与一个核心网络的激活有关,该网络涉及皮质下和边缘区域,当从无意识状态中醒来时,这些区域与额叶和下顶叶皮质的部分区域变得功能耦合。因此,意识的神经核心涉及前脑唤醒,作用是将起源于后感觉整合区域的运动意图与起源于更前脑区域的运动动作控制联系起来。这些发现揭示了意识状态出现所需的最小神经关联的最清晰图像。