Connecting brain and mind through temporo-spatial dynamics: Towards a theory of common currency.
Georg Northoff, Andrea Buccellato, Federico Zilio
Physics of life reviews March 1, 2025 DOI: 10.1016/j.plrev.2024.11.012 via PubMed
Summary
The connection between brain activity and mental experience remains poorly understood. The authors extend their earlier hypothesis that shared temporal and spatial dynamics provide a 'common currency' linking neural and mental features. They present additional evidence from thoughts, meditation, depression, and attention showing that temporal characteristics are shared by both brain and mind. New empirical examples demonstrate that spatial characteristics, such as topographic reorganization, are also shared in depression and meditation. The authors specify distinct forms of temporospatial correspondences along a continuum from simple to complex. They propose an integrated mind-brain theory called the Common currency theory (CCT) as a framework for understanding the neuro-mental relationship.
Study at a glance
| Characteristics | Theoretical or philosophical paper Peer reviewed |
|---|---|
| Citations | 31 |
| Key finding | Temporo-spatial dynamics are shared by neural and mental features, providing a common currency that connects brain and mind, forming the basis of the Common currency theory (CCT). |
Abstract
Despite major progress in our understanding of the brain, the connection of neural and mental features, that is, brain and mind, remains yet elusive. In our 2020 target paper ("Is temporospatial dynamics the 'common currency' of brain and mind? Spatiotemporal Neuroscience") we proposed the "Common currency hypothesis": temporo-spatial dynamics are shared by neural and mental features, providing their connection. The current paper aims to further support and extend the original description of such common currency into a first outline of a "Common currency theory" (CCT) of neuro-mental relationship. First, we extend the range of examples to thoughts, meditation, depression and attention all lending support that temporal characteristics, (i.e. dynamics) are shared by both neural and mental features. Second, we now also show empirical examples of how spatial characteristics, i.e., topography, are shared by neural and mental features; this is illustrated by topographic reorganization of both neural and mental states in depression and meditation. Third, considering the neuro-mental connection in theoretical terms, we specify their relationship by distinct forms of temporospatial correspondences, ranging on a continuum from simple to complex. In conclusion, we extend our initial hypothesis about the key role of temporo-spatial dynamics in neuro-mental relationship into a first outline of an integrated mind-brain theory, the "Common currency theory" (CCT).