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Current neurology and neuroscience reports

ISSN 1528-4042

2 papers in the library · 13 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

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.

What a "Landscape of Consciousness" Means for Neurology and Neuroscience.

Current neurology and neuroscience reports December 20, 2025 Robert Lawrence Kuhn 1 citation

A comprehensive, cross-disciplinary taxonomy called 'Landscape of Consciousness' organizes more than 350 theories of phenomenal consciousness across physicalist and non-physicalist traditions into 10 primary categories, including Materialism, Non-Reductive Physicalism, Quantum & Dimensions, Information, Panpsychisms, Monisms, Dualisms, Idealisms, and Anomalous & Altered States. Materialism, the largest category, contains 12 subcategories such as Neurobiological, Computational & Functionalism, and Embodied & Enactive. The taxonomy aims to encourage novel thinking among medical practitioners and neuroscientists by presenting theories neutrally in their authors' words. Two central theses are that understanding phenomenal consciousness should seek expansive yet rational diversity, and that issues like AI consciousness and free will depend on particular theories of consciousness.