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Esteban Vargas

Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso , Valparaíso, Chile.

1 paper in the library · publishing 2015

Papers

Neurophenomenology revisited: second-person methods for the study of human consciousness.

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2015 Francisco A Olivares, Esteban Vargas, Claudio Fuentes et al.

Neurophenomenology aims to bridge qualitative and quantitative methods in consciousness research through reciprocal constraints between first-person accounts and neurophysiological data, but has faced methodological difficulties in systematically obtaining and analyzing subjective reports. Recently developed second-person methods—interview techniques that elicit verbal and non-verbal information—offer a way to obtain detailed subjective reports. This paper examines the potential of second-person methodologies for neurophenomenology, describes available interview techniques, analyzes two experimental studies that incorporate them, and identifies the validation problem of comparing results across participants and interviewers. The authors argue that second-person methods are a powerful approach for closing the gap between experiential and neurobiological levels of description.