Scientists explore where consciousness arises in the brain
FILE PHOTO: People are silhouetted against the setting sun on top of the Drachenberg in Berlin, Germany, Germany, August 19, 2019. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch/File Photo
WASHINGTON - Consciousness is at the center of human existence, the ability to see, hear, dream, imagine, feel pain or pleasure, dread, love and more. But where precisely does this reside in the brain? That is a question that has long confounded scientists and clinicians. A new study is offering fresh insight.
In a quest to identify the parts of the brain underpinning consciousness, neuroscientists measured electrical and magnetic activity as well as blood flow in the brains of 256 people in 12 laboratories across the United States, Europe and China, while the participants viewed various images. The measurements tracked activation in various parts of the brain.
The researchers found that consciousness may not arise in the "smart" part of the brain - the frontal areas where thinking is housed, which progressively grew in the process of human evolution - but rather in the sensory zones at the back of the brain that process sight and sound.
"Why is any of this important?" asked neuroscientist Christof Koch of the Allen Institute in Seattle, one of the leaders of the study published this week in the journal Nature.
"If we want to understand the substrate of consciousness, who has it - adults, pre-linguistic children, a second trimester fetus, a dog, a mouse, a squid, a raven, a fly - we need to identify the underlying mechanisms in the brain, both for conceptual reasons as well as for clinical ones," Koch said.
The subjects in the study were shown images of people's faces and various objects.
"Consciousness is the way it feels like to see a drawing of a toaster or Jill's face. Consciousness is not the same as the behavior associated with this feeling, for example pushing a button or saying, 'I see Jill,'" Koch said.
The researchers tested two leading scientific theories about consciousness.
Under the Global Neuronal Workspace Theory, consciousness materializes in the front of the brain, with important pieces of information then broadcast widely throughout the brain. Under the Integrated Information Theory, consciousness emanates from the interaction and cooperation of various parts of the brain as they work collectively to integrate information that is consciously experienced.
The findings did not square with either theory.
"Where are the neuronal footprints of consciousness in the brain? Very crudely put, are they in the front of the cortex - the outermost layer of the brain - such as the prefrontal cortex, as predicted by the Global Neuronal Workspace Theory?" Koch asked.
It is this prefrontal cortex that makes our species uniquely human, driving higher-order cognitive processes such as planning, decision-making, reasoning, personality expression, and moderating social behavior.
"Or are the footprints in the back regions of the cortex, the posterior cortex?" Koch asked. The posterior cortex houses the regions where hearing and vision processing occurs.
"Here, the evidence is decidedly in favor of the posterior cortex. Either information pertaining to the conscious experience couldn't be found in the front or it was far weaker than in the back. This supports the idea that while the frontal lobes are critical to intelligence, judgment, reasoning, etc., they are not critically involved in seeing, in conscious visual perception," Koch said.
However, the study did not identify enough connections that last for as long as the conscious experience in the back of the brain to uphold the Integrated Information Theory.
There are practical applications in gaining a deeper understanding of the mechanics of consciousness in the brain.
Koch said it would be important for how doctors deal with patients in a coma or patients in a vegetative state or with unresponsive wakefulness syndrome, when they are awake but present no signs of awareness due to traumatic brain injury, stroke, cardiac arrest, a drug overdose or other causes.
"If the patient remains in this unresponsive state for longer than a few days without signs of recovery, the clinical team initiates discussion with the family around, 'Is this what they would have wanted?'" Koch said.
Of such patients, 70% to 90% die because a decision has been made to withdraw life-sustaining treatment.
"However, we now know that around a quarter of patients in either coma or vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome are conscious - covert consciousness - yet are unable to signal this at the bedside," Koch said, referring to research published last year in the New England Journal of Medicine. "Knowing about the footprints of consciousness in the brain will let us better detect this covert form of 'being there' without being able to signal." REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Israeli fire kills 23 people in Gaza, many at aid site, medics say
FILE PHOTO: Military vehicles manoeuvre in Gaza, as seen from the Israeli side of the border, June 11, 2025. REUTERS/Amir Cohen/File Photo CAIRO - Israeli fire and airstrikes killed at least 23 Palestinians across the Gaza Strip, most of them near an aid distribution site operated by the U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, local health authorities said. Medics at Al-Awda and Al-Aqsa Hospitals in central Gaza areas, where most of the casualties were moved to, said at least 15 people were killed as they tried to approach the GHF aid distribution site near the Netzarim corridor. The rest were killed in separate attacks across the enclave, they added. There has been no immediate comment by the Israeli military or the GHF on Saturday's incidents. The GHF began distributing food packages in Gaza at the end of May, overseeing a new model of aid distribution which the United Nations says is neither impartial nor neutral. The Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Saturday at least 274 people have so far been killed, and more than 2,000 wounded, near aid distribution sites since the GHF began operations in Gaza. Later on Saturday, the Israeli military ordered residents of Khan Younis and the nearby towns of Abassan and Bani Suhaila in the southern Gaza Strip to leave their homes and head west towards the so-called humanitarian zone area, saying it would forcefully work against "terror organizations" in the area. The war in Gaza erupted 20 months ago after Hamas-led militants raided Israel and took 251 hostages and killed 1,200 people, most of them civilians, on October 7, 2023, Israel's single deadliest day. Israel's military campaign since has killed nearly 55,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to health authorities in Gaza, and flattened much of the densely populated strip, which is home to more than two million people. Most of the population is displaced, and malnutrition is widespread. Despite efforts by the United States, Egypt, and Qatar to restore a ceasefire in Gaza, neither Israel nor Hamas has shown willingness to back down on core demands, with each side blaming the other for the failure to reach a deal. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Business Times
13 hours ago
- Business Times
Anxious families await dental identification of Air India crash victims
[AHMEDABAD] Dozens of anxious family members sat outside an Indian hospital on Friday (Jun 13) waiting to collect bodies of loved ones killed in the Air India plane crash, as doctors worked to gather dental samples from the deceased and run identification checks. In the world's worst aviation disaster in a decade, an Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner with 242 people on board bound for London took off from Ahmedabad on Thursday but crashed within about 30 seconds, erupting into a massive fireball. Outside the B.J. Medical College in Ahmedabad, an elderly woman said four of her relatives including two children were onboard the flight, but declined to speak further to the media until the bodies were handed over. 'Can you give us the dead bodies? If not then we will not give interviews. We are so tired now,' she said in frustration. Other relatives sat patiently at the hospital where many have in recent hours given blood samples for DNA profiling at a dedicated centre for collection. At the hospital, Jaishankar Pillai, a forensic dentist, told reporters the doctors were in the autopsy room until 4:30 am on Friday collecting dental samples, as 'teeth can withstand the heat', and they hoped they could use them for identification. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up 'We have recorded the dental records of 135 charred victims ... it's a very pathetic situation,' said Pillai, adding he did not have data for how many bodies had been identified so far. Officials outside the autopsy room told Reuters at least seven bodies had been handed over to their relatives after identification checks. The state administration said in a statement 219 relatives of crash victims had come forward for DNA testing and blood samples, while many others were being contacted. In the case of dental records, a person is not typically identified based on a relative's teeth, but through reference to the victim's prior dental charts, radiographs, mouth guards or other records. Pillai added that even a selfie photograph of the victim could help doctors match the gap between two teeth to run checks. Scenes of distress played out beside the autopsy room. Daksha Patni was mourning the loss of her nephew, 14-year-old Akash Patni, and wailing as she waited for his body. Akash had been near his family-run tea stall and was killed on the ground by the impact of the plane hitting a building. 'Hospital people aren't giving any good response. They are just saying 'come after 72 hours'. We are poor - that's why we are not allowed inside,' Daksha told Reuters. The cause of the crash, the first for a Boeing Dreamliner wide-body airliner, has not yet been determined and India's aviation minister said a formal investigation had begun. A family member of another victim, 81-year-old Abdur Razzaq Chitthi Wala, told IANS news agency he was not being allowed to verify the body. 'I received a video showing his body, it's burnt, but the face is clearly visible. All I'm asking is to let me verify the body,' said the relative, who did not share his name during the interview. 'They are saying give your blood sample, and you will get a call.' REUTERS

Straits Times
a day ago
- Straits Times
Goal to end Aids by 2030 ‘more off-track' after Trump cuts, UNAids head says
The US administration's decision to axe swathes of US foreign aid has disrupted the supply of life-saving HIV treatments. PHOTO: REUTERS JOHANNESBURG – US President Donald Trump's cuts to HIV/Aids programmes will further derail an already faltering plan to end the disease as a public health threat by 2030, UNAids executive director Winnie Byanyima said on June 13. With 1.3 million new infections in 2023, according to the latest data, the world was already 'off track', Ms Byanyima told journalists in South Africa, the country with the world's largest number of people living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), at eight million. 'Less funding means we will get more and more off-track,' she said in the main city of Johannesburg, after meeting South African President Cyril Ramaphosa to discuss Africa's HIV/Aids (acquired immune deficiency syndrome) strategy in light of the US president slashing billions of dollars in foreign aid in February. 'We don't know yet what that impact will be, but impact – there will be... already, you see in several countries a drop in the number of people going to clinics,' Ms Byanyima said. Before the cuts, prevention programmes had brought down new infections, she said, but they were 'not coming down fast enough to reach our target of 2023'. Now, with the shuttering of community prevention clinics across Africa, infections would surely rise, though it was not clear yet by how much, she said. The administration's decision to axe swathes of US foreign aid has disrupted the supply of life-saving HIV treatments, with some countries potentially running out. In South Africa, about a fifth of whose HIV budget was US-funded, testing and monitoring of HIV patients is already falling. Ms Byanyima said even poor, indebted countries were managing to plug funding gaps, but called on other rich nations to step in. 'We're saying to the donors: this is one of the diseases... without a cure, without a vaccine, yet we're seeing progress,' she said. 'If you've got a good success story, why drop it... before you end it?' REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.