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Today β€” 18 May 2024Main stream

The nature of consciousness, and how to enjoy it while you can

18 May 2024 at 07:31
A black background with multicolored swirls filling the shape of a human brain.

Enlarge (credit: SEAN GLADWELL)

Unraveling how consciousness arises out of particular configurations of organic matter is a quest that has absorbed scientists and philosophers for ages. Now, with AI systems behaving in strikingly conscious-looking ways, it is more important than ever to get a handle on who and what is capable of experiencing life on a conscious level. As Christof Koch writes in Then I Am Myself the World, "That you are intimately acquainted with the way life feels is a brute fact about the world that cries out for an explanation." His explanationβ€”bounded by the limits of current research and framed through Koch’s preferred theory of consciousnessβ€”is what he eloquently attempts to deliver.

Koch, a physicist, neuroscientist, and former president of the Allen Institute for Brain Science, has spent his career hunting for the seat of consciousness, scouring the brain for physical footprints of subjective experience. It turns out that the posterior hot zone, a region in the back of the neocortex, is intricately connected to self-awareness and experiences of sound, sight, and touch. Dense networks of neocortical neurons in this area connect in a looped configuration; output signals feedback into input neurons, allowing the posterior hot zone to influence its own behavior. And herein, Koch claims, lies the key to consciousness.

In the hot zone

According to integrated information theory (IIT)β€”which Koch strongly favors over a multitude of contending theories of consciousnessβ€”the Rosetta Stone of subjective experience is the ability of a system to influence itself: to use its past state to affect its present state and its present state to influence its future state.

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Yesterday β€” 17 May 2024Main stream

"this rat borg collective ended up [performing] better than single rats"

17 May 2024 at 08:39
Conscious Ants and Human Hives by Peter Watts has an entertaining take on Neuralink.

In breif, Watts doubts Neuralink could provide "faster internet" in the sense Neuralink markets to investors, but other darker markets exist.. Around fiction, if you've read Blindsight and Echopraxia then The Colonel touches amusizingly employs Watts perspective on hiveminds. "Attack of the Hope Police: Delusional Optimism at the End of the World?" is lovely latlk too. Also "The Collapse Is Coming. Will Humanity Adapt?" by Peter Watts.
Before yesterdayMain stream

Backstabbing, bluffing and playing dead: has AI learned to deceive? – podcast

As AI systems have grown in sophistication, so has their capacity for deception, according to a new analysis from researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Dr Peter Park, an AI existential safety researcher at MIT and author of the research, tells Ian Sample about the different examples of deception he uncovered, and why they will be so difficult to tackle as long as AI remains a black box

Listen to the Guardian’s Black Box series all about humans and artificial intelligence

Read Hannah Devlin’s article about the MIT study

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Β© Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images

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Β© Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images

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