Brain and Creativity Institute, Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-2921, U.S.A.
Neural Comput. 2023 Feb 17;35(3):277-286. doi: 10.1162/neco_a_01521.
In this view, we address the problem of consciousness, and although we focus on its human presentation, we note that the phenomenon is present in numerous nonhuman species and use findings from a variety of animal studies to explain our hypothesis for how consciousness is made. Consciousness occurs when mind contents, such as perceptions and thoughts, are spontaneously identified as belonging to a specific organism/owner. Conscious minds are said to have a self that experiences mental events. We hypothesize that the automatic identification that associates minds and organisms is provided by a continuous flow of homeostatic feelings. Those feelings arise from the uninterrupted process of life regulation and correspond to both salient physiological fluctuations such as hunger, pain, well-being, or malaise, as well as to states closer to metabolic equilibrium and best described as feelings of life/existence, such as breathing or body temperature. We also hypothesize that homeostatic feelings were the inaugural phenomena of consciousness in biological evolution and venture that they were selected because the information they provided regarding the current state of life regulation conferred extraordinary advantages to the organisms so endowed. The "knowledge" carried by conscious homeostatic feelings provided "overt" guidance for life regulation, an advance over the covert regulation present in nonconscious organisms. Finally, we outline a mechanism for the generation of feelings based on a two-way interaction between interoceptive components of the nervous system and a particular set of nonneural components of the organism's interior, namely, viscera and circulating chemical molecules involved in their operations. Feelings emerge from this interaction as continuous and hybrid phenomena, related simultaneously to two series of events. The first is best described by the terms neural/representational/and mental and the second by the terms nonneural/visceral/and chemical. We note that this account offers a solution for the mind-body problem: homeostatic feelings constitute the "mental" version of bodily processes.
在这种观点中,我们探讨了意识问题,尽管我们专注于人类意识的表现,但我们注意到这种现象存在于许多非人类物种中,并利用各种动物研究的发现来解释我们关于意识是如何产生的假设。当心理内容(如感知和思维)被自发识别为属于特定的生物体/所有者时,意识就会出现。有意识的头脑被认为有一个体验心理事件的自我。我们假设,将思想和生物体联系起来的自动识别是由恒常感受的连续流动提供的。这些感受源于生命调节的不间断过程,对应于饥饿、疼痛、舒适或不适等显著的生理波动,以及更接近代谢平衡的状态,并最好被描述为生命/存在的感觉,如呼吸或体温。我们还假设,恒常感受是生物进化中意识的初始现象,并推测它们是被选择的,因为它们提供的关于生命调节当前状态的信息赋予了具有这些感受的生物体非凡的优势。有意识的恒常感受所携带的“知识”为生命调节提供了“明显”的指导,这是无意识生物体中存在的隐蔽调节所无法比拟的。最后,我们基于神经系统的内脏感觉成分和生物体内部特定的非神经成分(即参与其运作的内脏和循环化学分子)之间的双向相互作用,概述了一种产生感受的机制。感受作为连续和混合的现象从这种相互作用中产生,同时与两个系列的事件相关。第一个系列最好用神经/表现/和心理术语来描述,第二个系列最好用非神经/内脏/和化学术语来描述。我们注意到,这种解释为身心问题提供了一个解决方案:恒常感受构成了身体过程的“心理”版本。