Skip to content

Jonathan Huntley

Division of Psychiatry, University College London, London, UK.

2 papers in the library · 29 citations · publishing 2023-2024

Papers

The cognitive neuroscience of self‐awareness: Current framework, clinical implications, and future research directions

Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Cognitive Science December 3, 2023 Daniel C Mograbi, Simon Hall, Beatriz Arantes et al. 17 citations

Self-awareness, the capacity to regard oneself as an object of awareness, remains a puzzle addressed by religion, philosophy, and science. This review examines the neurocognitive mechanisms behind self-awareness, describing it as a multidimensional, emergent property that manifests at different levels of cognitive complexity, framed within predictive coding theory. It discusses how self-awareness is altered in neuropsychiatric conditions and evaluates alternative frameworks for understanding it in both health and psychopathology. The article identifies gaps in current knowledge and suggests directions for future research.

Brain Networks, Neurotransmitters and Psychedelics: Towards a Neurochemistry of Self-Awareness.

Current neurology and neuroscience reports August 1, 2024 Daniel C Mograbi, Rafael Rodrigues, Bheatrix Bienemann et al. 12 citations

Self-awareness—the capacity to make oneself the object of one's own attention—has clinical relevance, and understanding its neurochemical basis may clarify causes of and treatments for psychopathological conditions. This article reviews how psychedelics influence self-awareness by affecting brain networks such as the default-mode and salience networks, and neurotransmitters. Within a predictive-coding framework, it examines effects on interoception, body ownership, agency, metacognition, emotional regulation, and autobiographical memory. Improved emotional regulation and autobiographical memory have been observed with psychedelic use, suggesting changes in higher-order self-awareness, modulated by relaxed priors and enhanced cognitive flexibility. Bodily self-awareness alterations are less consistent, potentially varying with dose, acute versus long-term effects, and clinical conditions.