Skip to content

Distinguishing Computational Intelligence, Sentience, and Consciousness in Artificial Systems: A Hybrid Framework and Scenario-Based Analysis

Pakhee Dhanke, Shweta C. Dharmadhikari

International Journal of Computer Applications May 30, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.5120/ijca3230e5d04312 via OpenAlex

Summary

Computational intelligence, sentience, and consciousness are distinct concepts that must be separated for responsible AI development. Computational intelligence simulates rational decision-making without subjective experience, while sentient architectures model emotional states and inner conflict. Authentic self-awareness and meta-cognitive processes differ from both. A Hybrid Evaluation Framework combining Integrated Information Theory, Global Neuronal Workspace Theory, and ethical reasoning is proposed for scenario-based testing of AI systems.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Computational intelligence, sentience, and consciousness are distinct concepts that must be separated for responsible AI development.

Abstract

This paper examines the critical distinctions between computational intelligence, sentience, and consciousness in artificial systems.It argues that clearly separating these concepts is essential for advancing technical development, ethical frameworks, and responsible societal integration of AI.By analysing how computational intelligence simulates rational decision-making but lacks internal subjective experience, and how sentient architectures introduce models of emotional states and simulated inner conflict, this work demonstrates the necessity of understanding both the capabilities and limitations of current AI.Consciousness theory is explored to show how authentic self-awareness and meta-cognitive processes differ from both computational logic and simulated feeling.These distinctions inform pressing questions regarding AI safety, ethical governance, and human-AI interaction.A Hybrid Evaluation Framework integrating Integrated Information Theory (IIT), Global Neuronal Workspace Theory (GNWT), and ethical reasoning is proposed and illustrated through scenario-based testing.

Tags

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment