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Visceral Loop

Malcolm Lett edited this page Aug 15, 2020 · 16 revisions

The "Visceral Loop" is a characterisation of the thought processes required in order for one to rationalise about their own awareness, about the apparent viscerality of those thoughts, and thus for them to conclude themselves as conscious. It takes as a premise that high-order thought is carried out in cycles of a state machine, where the output of one cycle (or some summarisation thereof) is used as input to the next cycle, along with further inputs retrieved from other sources (such as sense, or memory). A further premise is that each cycle of the state machine can only carry out a single basic processing step. In other words, multiple cycles of the state machine are required for any algorithm or thought process that requires the combination of multiple intermediate results, or requires access to memory structures after intermediate decisions of what to access, or simply requires more complex thinking than one's brain has learned to perform within a single pass through of its neural structures.

Consider the following mental conversation:

  1. "I am tired, therefore I want to sit down"
  2. "I am aware that I just had the desire to sit down, and I have the strong sense that it was I who decided that"
  3. "Because I make decisions, and I am aware of those decisions, I am conscious"

Each step is carried out through the same brain mechanics. First, a signal is received as input to the high-order processing region of the brain, either as a novel sense input, or as state output from a prior cycle. Attention selection chooses that signal over other potential signals for processing. A result is produced from a single pass-through of the high-order processing neural network. That result is the output of that cycle of processing, which is recorded in working memory, and fed back as input to the next cycle.

The following section formalises the above example as the three iterations of the visceral loop, and in doing so defines what is necessary in order to reach the conclusion of one's own consciousness.

The claim of the visceral loop is that: i) any decision of one's own consciousness requires at least three cycles of the state machine, ii) the scope of what we can conclude as being conscious of is limited by what data can pass through these three cycles, and iii) that we gain a useful insight into our thought and consciousness itself through characterisation of thought into the three cycles, or iterations, of this loop.

Formalisation

Presented here is a first attempt towards a mathematical formalism of the conclusion of one's own consciousness.

One concludes themselves as conscious if they can conclude that:

  • ∃ t: I am conscious of t

In order to conclude that one is conscious of some t, some prerequisites must be met and a number of algorithmic steps must be carried out. The steps carried out follow three iterations of the visceral loop:

Iteration 1:

  1. a sense input or some past state is processed, producing t: some output conclusion, decision, action, or intermediate logical step

Iteration 2:

  1. prerequisite: t is present (in model)
  2. prerequisite: t is sourced from 'I' (as indicated through sense labeling)
  3. prerequisite: ∃ memory of producing t in past thought
  4. t is selected as focus of attention for processing, producing: i) fact of presence of t, and ii) relationship of t to 'I'

Iteration 3:

  1. prerequisite: ∃ some a priori notion about consciousness or experience
  2. prerequisite: model contains i) fact of presence of t, and ii) relationship of t to 'I'
  3. t and its relationship to I is selected as focus of attention for processing, producing: "I am conscious of t"

Essentially, we are aware of our own thoughts, but more than that, we are aware of our awareness. That is the crux of our conclusion that we are conscious.

The above example represents the case where we conclude consciousness from observations of being able to form our own novel thoughts. Another example is of being able to experience our senses, where steps #3 and #4 are dropped.

The three iterations above can be seen as just a sampling of steps within a long linear thought path. Indeed, a fourth iteration is required to move from "I am conscious of t" to "I am a conscious being". However, it is more useful to use the above three iterations as a basis for characterising kinds of thought:

  • Iteration 1: Thought - General high-level thought about sense inputs or further processing of existing model state. Such as when making a decision, solving a problem, or performing an action. This covers the vast majority of thought, as we generally do not need to waste our time thinking about thought itself.

  • Iteration 2: Meta-thought - Thought that depends on having an awareness of one's own thoughts. This is what enables us to actively monitor and control our thought. For example, when realising that we made a mistake. It is the reason why we can take an active role in teaching ourselves new skills.

  • Iteration 3: Meta-meta-thought or Meta-awareness - Thoughts about the fact that one is aware of their own thoughts. For example, Descartes' famous "I think therefore I am" quote is the result of Iteration 3 thought.

It is interesting to note that the majority of high-level thought is done in Iteration 1 alone, and that Iteration 2 thought is a big evolutionary step forwards in the control mechanism of this state machine.

Analysis of Phenomenal Anecdotes

While it does not explain the phenomenon of experience, it fully explains the effect of us experiencing consciousness and how/why we subsequently process that experience. The Analogy of the Thalamic Symbiote provided a framework that helped to introspect the boundaries and properties of consciousness. The Visceral Loop is one possible mechanism that produces those characteristics.

Post-hoc awareness of decisions

Visceral loop explains why fRMI studies have shown that we become aware of a decision after its made. Because it takes extra processing cycles to consciously consider the fact of the decision being made. In short: we can only think about one thing at a time, so the decision itself and thought about the decision require separate steps.

Sleep

When going under general anaesthetic, we lose our sense of time. We seem to experience ourselves waking up immediately after sleeping. This is different to sleep, where we have some sense of time passing. Clearly, the generic anaesthetic disables some internal time tracking that is otherwise available during sleep......[but why did I think this was relevant to visceral loop?]

Conclusions

One very important conclusion can be drawn from an understanding of the visceral loop:

The content and boundaries of what we can conclude as consciousness is dictated by what is representable within the model, and what processing can be performed against that model.

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