Publication | Open Access
Dendritic integration theory: A thalamo-cortical theory of state and content of consciousness
61
Citations
51
References
2020
Year
Brain MechanismBrain OrganizationPsychologySocial SciencesDisorders Of ConsciousnessNeural MechanismNeurodynamicsSensory NeuroscienceThalamo-cortical TheoryCognitive NeuroscienceConsciousnessBrainConscious ExperienceCognitive ScienceCortical RemodelingNeurophilosophyDendritic Integration TheoryNervous SystemConsciousness ResearchBrain CircuitryThalamo-cortical SystemNeurobiological MechanismDendritic ProcessingNeurophysiologyComputational NeuroscienceNeuroanatomyPhysiologyNeural CircuitsNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicinePhilosophy Of Mind
The idea that the thalamo-cortical system is the crucial constituent of the neurobiological mechanisms of consciousness has a long history. For the last few decades, however, consciousness research has to a large extent overlooked the interplay between the cortex and thalamus. Here we revive an integrated view of the neurobiology of consciousness by presenting and discussing several recent major findings about the role of the thalamocortical interactions in consciousness. Based on these findings we propose a specific cellular mechanism how thalamic nuclei modulate the integration of different processing streams within single cortical pyramidal neurons. This theory is inspired by recent work done in rodents, but it integrates decades of work conducted on various species. We illustrate how this new view readily explains various properties and experimental phenomena associated with conscious experience. We discuss the implications of this idea and some of the experiments that need to be done in order to test it. Our view bridges two long-standing perspectives on the neural mechanisms of consciousness and proposes that cortical and thalamo-cortical processing interact at the level of single pyramidal cells.
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