Perception, Memory, Simulation, and Consciousness: A Convergence of Theories.
Journal of cognitive neuroscience January 7, 2026 Andrew E Budson, Hinze Hogendoorn, Donna Rose Addis
Consciousness may be the explicit memory of past events or the cognitive capacity to simulate events, used to remember the past, experience the present, or imagine the future. Perceptual mechanisms represent an ongoing, editable best estimate of past, present, and future. At milliseconds to seconds timescales, there may be no hard boundary between perception and memory. Conscious perceptions, decisions, and actions are simulations of prior unconscious sensations, decisions, and actions. The neural correlates of consciousness may thus be those of simulation or explicit memory, involving the default mode, frontoparietal control, and salience networks. Each aspect of consciousness may have its own neural correlate.