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A connectionist theory of phenomenal experience.

G O'brien, J Opie

The Behavioral and brain sciences February 1, 1999 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1017/s0140525x9900179x via PubMed

Summary

The abstract discusses two main approaches to understanding consciousness: vehicle theories, which focus on the representational vehicles of the brain, and process theories, which emphasize the computational processes over these vehicles. Vehicle theories are rare due to evidence suggesting dissociability between conscious experience and explicit representation, along with the dominance of classical computational theory. However, recent critiques of dissociation studies and the rise of connectionism, which supports vehicle theories, prompt a reevaluation. The authors propose that phenomenal experience arises from explicit representation in parallel distributed processing networks.

Study at a glance

Key finding Phenomenal experience consists of the explicit representation of information in neurally realized parallel distributed processing networks.

Abstract

When cognitive scientists apply computational theory to the problem of phenomenal consciousness, as many have been doing recently, there are two fundamentally distinct approaches available. Consciousness is to be explained either in terms of the nature of the representational vehicles the brain deploys or in terms of the computational processes defined over these vehicles. We call versions of these two approaches vehicle and process theories of consciousness, respectively. However, although there may be space for vehicle theories of consciousness in cognitive science, they are relatively rare. This is because of the influence exerted, on the one hand, by a large body of research that purports to show that the explicit representation of information in the brain and conscious experience are dissociable, and on the other, by the classical computational theory of mind--the theory that takes human cognition to be a species of symbol manipulation. Two recent developments in cognitive science combine to suggest that a reappraisal of this situation is in order. First, a number of theorists have recently been highly critical of the experimental methodologies used in the dissociation studies--so critical, in fact, that it is no longer reasonable to assume that the dissociability of conscious experience and explicit representation has been adequately demonstrated. Second, classicism, as a theory of human cognition, is no longer as dominant in cognitive science as it once was. It now has a lively competitor in the form of connectionism; and connectionism, unlike classicism, does have the computational resources to support a robust vehicle theory of consciousness. In this target article we develop and defend this connectionist vehicle theory of consciousness. It takes the form of the following simple empirical hypothesis: phenomenal experience consists of the explicit representation of information in neurally realized parallel distributed processing (PDP) networks. This hypothesis leads us to reassess some common wisdom about consciousness, but, we argue, in fruitful and ultimately plausible ways.

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