1. The document discusses evidence from various fields regarding the neural organization of consciousness. It introduces a principle relating target selection, action selection, and motivation to optimize integration for real-time action.
2. Based on this principle, the major brain systems form a centralized functional design with an upper brainstem system playing a key role in conscious function. This system forms the core for the elaboration of conscious contents in the expanding forebrain.
3. Evidence from decorticated mammals and people born without a cortex suggests brainstem mechanisms play an integral role in constituting the conscious state, and consciousness cannot be confined just to the thalamocortical complex.
1. The document discusses evidence from various fields regarding the neural organization of consciousness. It introduces a principle relating target selection, action selection, and motivation to optimize integration for real-time action.
2. Based on this principle, the major brain systems form a centralized functional design with an upper brainstem system playing a key role in conscious function. This system forms the core for the elaboration of conscious contents in the expanding forebrain.
3. Evidence from decorticated mammals and people born without a cortex suggests brainstem mechanisms play an integral role in constituting the conscious state, and consciousness cannot be confined just to the thalamocortical complex.
1. The document discusses evidence from various fields regarding the neural organization of consciousness. It introduces a principle relating target selection, action selection, and motivation to optimize integration for real-time action.
2. Based on this principle, the major brain systems form a centralized functional design with an upper brainstem system playing a key role in conscious function. This system forms the core for the elaboration of conscious contents in the expanding forebrain.
3. Evidence from decorticated mammals and people born without a cortex suggests brainstem mechanisms play an integral role in constituting the conscious state, and consciousness cannot be confined just to the thalamocortical complex.
1. The document discusses evidence from various fields regarding the neural organization of consciousness. It introduces a principle relating target selection, action selection, and motivation to optimize integration for real-time action.
2. Based on this principle, the major brain systems form a centralized functional design with an upper brainstem system playing a key role in conscious function. This system forms the core for the elaboration of conscious contents in the expanding forebrain.
3. Evidence from decorticated mammals and people born without a cortex suggests brainstem mechanisms play an integral role in constituting the conscious state, and consciousness cannot be confined just to the thalamocortical complex.
To be published in Behavioral and Brain Sciences (in press)
Cambridge University Press 2006
Below is the unedited, uncorrected Iinal draIt oI a BBS target article that has been accepted Ior publication. This preprint has been prepared Ior potential commentators who wish to nominate themselves Ior Iormal commentary invitation. Please DO NOT write a commentary until you receive a Iormal invitation. II you are invited to submit a commentary, a copyedited, corrected version oI this paper will be posted.
Consciousness without a cerebral cortex: A challenge Ior neuroscience and medicine
Bjorn Merker Gamla Kyrkv. 44 SE-14171 Segeltorp Sweden E-mail: gyr694ctninet.se
Acknowledgements: My gratitude goes Iirst to all the members oI the hydranencephaly internet group Iounded by Barb Aleman. To them and their children I owe not only this article, but a precious enrichment oI my liIe. I am grateIul as well to Bernard Baars Ior his personal encouragement, and to him, Douglas Watt, Alan Shewmon and Jaak Panksepp Ior most helpIul comments on an earlier version oI this manuscript. The comments and suggestions provided by Iive reIerees helped me to Iurther improve this manuscript.
Abstract: A broad range oI evidence regarding the Iunctional organization oI the vertebrate brain spanning Irom comparative neurology over experimental psychology and neurophysiology to clinical data is reviewed Ior its bearing on conceptions oI the neural organization oI consciousness. A novel principle relating target selection, action selection and motivation to one another as a means to optimize integration Ior action in real time is introduced. With its help the principal macrosystems oI the vertebrate brain plan can be seen to Iorm a centralized Iunctional design in which an upper brain stem system organized Ior conscious Iunction plays a key role. This system Iorms the prototypical core around which an expanding Iorebrain could serve as a medium Ior the elaboration oI conscious contents, culminating in the cerebral cortex oI mammals. The highly conserved upper brainstem system, which extends Irom the rooI oI the midbrain to the basal diencephalon, integrates the massively parallel and distributed inIormation capacity oI the cerebral hemispheres into the limited-capacity, sequential mode oI operation required Ior coherent behavior. This perspective sheds light on the division oI labor among the three principal cortical territories implicated in attentional and conscious Iunctions, and helps us understand the purposive, goal-directed behavior exhibited by mammals aIter experimental decortication, as well as evidence that children born without a cortex are conscious. Taken together these circumstances suggest that brainstem mechanisms play an integral part in constituting the conscious state, and that an adequate account oI neural mechanisms oI conscious Iunction cannot be conIined to the thalamocortical complex alone.
Keywords: Action selection, anencephaly, central decision making, consciousness, control architectures, hydranencephaly, macrosystems, motivation, target selection, zona incerta.
2 1. Introduction
The Iour semi-independent pacemakers oI the non-cephalized nervous system oI the cubomedusa equip this predatory jellyIish with Ilexible directional locomotor responsiveness to asymmetric sensory inputs (Satterlie & Nolen, 2001). There is no reason to assume that the environmental guidance thus supplied by its radially arranged nerve net involves or gives rise to experience oI any kind. Our own environmental orientation, on the other hand, commonly takes place in a state oI wakeIulness we call conscious, which typically involves seeing, hearing, Ieeling or other kinds oI experience. Somewhere between medusa and human there is a transition to conscious Iunction, and the nature oI the capacity it bestows has exercised psychology, neuroscience and cognitive studies virtually since their inceptions (James 1890; Adrian et al. 1954; Mandler 1975; Baars 1988).
There is no compelling reason to think that nervous systems more complex than those oI the medusa, and capable oI perIorming more sophisticated Iunctions, should not also perIorm in a perpetual night oI unconsciousness. The Iact that not all oI them do so suggests that consciousness has some role or Iunction to Iill in the neural economy oI brains thus endowed (Searle 1992). In exploring what this might involve, the exclusive concern throughout what Iollows will be with consciousness in its most basic and general sense, that is, as the state or condition presupposed by any experience whatsoever. Given recent proliIeration oI terminology surrounding the concept oI consciousness (see Morin 2006 Ior a useIul analysis and integration), the Iollowing additional remarks should help place this usage in context.
As employed here, the attribution oI consciousness is not predicated upon any particular level or degree oI complexity oI the processes or contents that constitute the conscious state, but only upon whatever arrangement oI those processes or contents makes experience itselI possible. To the extent that any percept, simple or sophisticated, is experienced, it is conscious, and similarly Ior any Ieeling, even iI vague, or any impulse to action, however inchoate. This agrees well with the type oI dictionary deIinition that renders consciousness as 'the state or activity that is characterized by sensation, emotion, volition, or thought (Webster`s Third New International Dictionary, unabridged edition, 1961). In this basic sense, then, consciousness may be regarded most simply as the 'medium oI any and all possible experience.
With regard to the way in which this medium might be implemented neurally, the present treatment is committed to an architectonic rather than a quantitative (or 'graded) view. That is, as here conceived, a conscious mode oI Iunctioning is dependent upon quite speciIic neural arrangements creating interIaces oI particular kinds between speciIic domains oI neural Iunction, rather than a result oI a general increase in inIormational capacity or complexity achieved by expansion oI a structural substrate which below a certain size does not support consciousness. Thus, what disqualiIies the medusa nerve net in this regard is not its simplicity, but its lack oI speciIic structural arrangements required to support conscious Iunction. Given an arrangement capable oI supporting consciousness, its contents may diIIer widely in complexity or sophistication. The range oI possibilities in this regard is Ielicitously captured by the 'scale oI sentience oI Indian tradition (Bagchi, 1975), as Iollows:
'This 'This is so 'I am aIIected by this which is so 3 'So this is I who am aIIected by this which is so
Each 'stage in this scale, Irom mere experienced sensation to selI-consciousness, Ialls within the compass oI consciousness as here deIined, and presupposes it. Accordingly, to see, to hear, to Ieel or otherwise to experience something is to be conscious, irrespective oI whether in addition one is aware that one is seeing, hearing, etc., as cogently argued by Dretske (1993; see also Searle 1992; Merker 1997). Such additional awareness, in reIlective consciousness or selI- consciousness, is one oI many contents oI consciousness available to creatures with sophisticated cognitive capacities. However, as noted by Morin (2006), even in their case it is present only intermittently, in a kind oI time-sharing with more immediate, unreIlective experience. To dwell in the latter is not to Iall unconscious, but to be unselIconsciously conscious. ReIlective awareness is thus more akin to a luxury oI consciousness on the part oI certain big-brained species, and not its deIining property.
The exploration oI the constitution oI the conscious state to be pursued here will yield a conception oI its Iunctional role revolving around integration Ior action. As such its Iunctional utility will turn out to be independent oI the level oI sophistication at which the contents it integrates are deIined. This opens the possibility that the evolution oI its essential mechanisms did not have to await advanced stages oI cortical development, but took place independently oI it. As we shall see, certain Iundamental Ieatures oI vertebrate brain organization suggest that key mechanisms oI consciousness are implemented in the midbrain and basal diencephalon, while the telencephalon serves as a medium Ior the increasingly sophisticated elaboration oI conscious contents.
With some notable exceptions (e.g. Scheibel & Scheibel 1977; Panksepp 1982; Thompson 1993; Bogen 1995; Watt 2000; Parvizi & Damasio 2001), brainstem mechanisms have not Iigured prominently in the upsurge oI interest in the nature and organization oI consciousness that was ushered in with cognitivism in psychology and neuroscience (Mandler 1975; Miller 1986; Baars 1988). Few cognitivists or neuroscientists would today object to the assertion that 'cortex is the organ oI consciousness. 1 This is, in a sense, a return to an older view oI the supremacy oI the cerebral cortex Irom which a Iundamental discovery oI the late 1940s had stimulated a partial retreat. In keeping with the sense that the cerebral cortex is the organ oI higher Iunctions it had been widely assumed that the regulation oI its two primary states sleep and wakeIulness was a cortical Iunction as well (see, e.g., the critical discussion oI this stance in Gamper 1926, pp. 68- 78). Then, in the late 1940s, Moruzzi and Magoun (1949) discovered that local stimulation oI circumscribed cell groups in the pons and midbrain oI experimental animals exerts a global activating inIluence on the cerebral cortex as well as on behavioral state, and that experimental lesions in these brainstem sites are capable oI rendering animals somnolent and even comatose (Magoun 1954; cI. Parvizi & Damasio 2003). This came as a shock to the corticocentric perspective, and stimulated an avalanche oI research on brainstem regulation oI sleep and wakeIulness and its relationship to the conscious state (summarized in symposium volumes edited by Adrian et al. 1954; Jasper et al. 1958; and Eccles 1966).
These eIIorts proved to be so successIul that the once daring proposal that the brainstem regulates cortical state is unproblematic today. The same cannot be said oI an allied, largely neglected, but even more radical proposal that emerged Irom the same pioneering wave oI consciousness studies. Some oI the principals in these developments notably the neurosurgeon Wilder PenIield and his colleague Herbert Jasper went on to re-examine the routine assumption that 4 another 'higher Iunction, closely allied to that oI sleep and wakeIulness, namely consciousness, is an exclusively cortical aIIair (PenIield and Jasper, 1954). On the basis oI a set oI clinical and physiological observations centered on the epilepsies these authors proposed that the highest integrative functions of the brain are not completed at the cortical level, but in an upper brainstem svstem of central convergence supplving the kev mechanism of consciousness (PenIield, 1952). Since their proposal is the natural point oI departure Ior the present one, which elaborates and updates it in the light oI subsequent developments, a brieI review oI its history Iollows.
2. Clinical beginnings
PenIield and Jasper leIt the anatomical deIinition oI the upper brainstem system they invoked somewhat vague, but it was suggested to include the midbrain reticular Iormation and its extension into what was then known as the 'nonspeciIic thalamus (a nuclear grouping encompassing the midline, intralaminar and reticular thalamic nuclei). They regarded this anatomically subcortical system to be Iunctionally supra-cortical in the sense oI occupying a superordinate position relative to the cerebral cortex in Iunctional or control terms (PenIield & Jasper 1954, pp. 28, 77; see Iurther Sections 3 and 4, below). They called it the 'centrencephalic system, and assigned it a crucial role in the organization oI conscious and volitional Iunctions (ibid., p. 473). Figure 1 is based on a Iigure illustrating A. Fessard`s lucid account oI the conceptual setting Ior these ideas, included in the Iirst oI the symposium volumes cited above (Fessard 1954).
Figure 1: Four principal alternatives regarding interactions between cortex and brainstem in the constitution oI the conscious state. Cortex (large oval) and brainstem (small oval) in highly schematic side (saggittal) view. Small circle: 'centrencephalic system. In each alternative, normal waking cortical Iunction is assumed to require 'enabling activation originating in the brain stem, marked by three dashed arrows radiating Irom brainstem to cortex. Upper left: the 'corticocentric alternative, in which integration through cortico-cortical connections alone is suIIicient to constitute the conscious state. Upper right: Cortical integration via a subcortical relay, such as might occur via the dorsal thalamus. Only one such relay is depicted Ior the sake oI clarity. The scheme is still corticocentric, since integration is cortical, albeit dependent upon extracortical relays Ior its implementation. Lower left: Centrencephalic hypothesis, based on diagram IV in Fessard (1954). Here an essential Iunctional component oI consciousness is supplied by brainstem mechanisms interacting with the cortex. Lower right: Primary consciousness implemented in the brainstem alone, as in cases oI cortical removal or damage discussed in Sections 4.4 and 5 oI the text.
5 The PenIield and Jasper proposal emerged Irom extensive experience derived Irom an innovation in neurosurgical practice: they routinely removed sizeable sectors oI cortex in conscious patients Ior the control oI intractable epilepsy (PenIield & Jasper 1954). By perIorming the surgery under local anesthesia only, the authors ensured that their patients remained conscious, cooperative, and capable oI selI-report throughout the operation. This allowed the neurosurgeons to electrically stimulate the exposed cortex while communicating with the patient, in order to locate Iunctionally critical areas to be spared when removing epileptogenic tissue. They then proceeded to remove cortical tissue while continuing to communicate with the patient. They were impressed by the Iact that the removal oI sizeable sectors oI cortex such as those diagrammed in the composite oI Fig. 2 never interrupted the patient`s continuity oI consciousness even while the tissue was being surgically removed.
Figure 2. Large cortical excisions perIormed under local anesthesia by W. PenIield Ior the control oI intractable epilepsy in three patients, entered on a single diagram. The patients remained conscious and communicative throughout the operation. All removals extended to the midline. The two posterior cases were right-sided, while the Irontal removal was leIt-sided, and has been mirror-imaged. In no case was the removal oI cortical tissue accompanied by a loss oI consciousness. Redrawn aIter Iigures VI-2, XIII-2, and XVIII-7 oI PenIield & Jasper (1954).
The authors note that a cortical removal even as radical as hemispherectomy does not deprive a patient oI consciousness, but rather oI certain Iorms oI inIormation, discriminative capacities, or abilities, but not oI consciousness itselI (PenIield & Jasper 1954, p. 477; Devlin et al. 2003). That does not mean that no cortical insult is capable oI compromizing consciousness: in adult humans massive bilateral cortical damage will typically issue in a so called persistent vegetative state (Jennett 2002). This by itselI does not, however, allow us to make an equation between cortical Iunction and consciousness, since such damage inevitably disrupts numerous brainstem mechanisms normally in receipt oI cortical input, as discussed Iurther in subsequent sections (see Shewmon 2004 Ior the conceptual and empirical complexities oI the vegetative state). What impressed PenIield and Jasper was the extent to which the cerebral cortex could be subjected to acute insult without producing so much as an interruption in the continuity oI consciousness. Their opinion in this regard bears some weight, since their magnum opus oI 1954 Epilepsv and the functional anatomv of the human brain summarizes and evaluates experience with 750 such operations.
6 When the exposed cortex was stimulated electrically to assess Iunctional localization, stimulation parameters were adjusted so as to avoid triggering epileptic seizures in the patient. From time to time seizures were nevertheless triggered inadvertently. Over the large number oI operations perIormed, every variety oI seizure was thus produced by cortical stimulation, except one: PenIield and Jasper never saw the complete electrographic pattern that accompanies absence epilepsy induced by electrical stimulation oI any part oI the cerebral cortex (PenIield & Jasper 1954, p. 480). This pattern oI 3 per second trains oI 'spike and wave discharges evolves synchronously in the two hemispheres, down to a coincidence in the two hemispheres oI the very Iirst abnormal spike detectable in the electroencephalogram (Gibbs et al. 1936, 1937; PenIield & Jasper 1954, p. 483, Fig. XII-3, p. 624, Fig. XV-26, etc.).
Seizures oI this type bear directly on our topic because oI their conspicuous association with disturbances oI consciousness (ibid., pp. 24, 28). In Iact, they are oIten initiated by a lapse oI consciousness (ibid., p. 477), and in pure Iorm they 'consist almost solely oI a lapse oI consciousness (PenIield & Jasper 1954, p. 480). Without a preceding 'aura or other warning, and in the midst oI normal activities, the patient assumes a vacant expression ('blank stare) and becomes unresponsive. Ongoing activities may continue in the Iorm oI automatisms (as complex as automatic speech, implying organized cortical activity), or they may arrest Ior the duration oI the oIten brieI seizure episode. At the end oI such a seizure, which may last no more than a Iew seconds, the patient, who typically remains upright throughout, sometimes actively moving, resumes conscious activities where they were interrupted, has amnesia Ior what transpired during the episode, and may have no knowledge that the episode took place except indirectly, by means oI evidence Ior the lapse oI time available to the discursive, post-seizure, intellect.
PenIield and Jasper recognized in these seizures 'a unique opportunity to study the neuronal substratum oI consciousness (ibid., p. 480; cI. BlumenIeld & Taylor 2003). The coincident bilateral onset and cessation oI these seizures suggested to the authors an origin in a centrally placed upper brainstem site oI paroxysmal induction (PenIield & Jasper 1954, pp. 27, 473, 477, 482, 622-633). Though in their experience the pattern was not triggered by cortical stimulation, it could be evoked experimentally in the cat by stimulation oI the midline thalamus (Jasper & Droogleever-Fortuyn 1947). Modern methods have added both detail and qualiIications to the PenIield and Jasper account (see review by Meeren et al. 2005), yet upper brainstem involvement in absence epilepsy has stood the test oI time, and is still being actively pursued both clinically and through research employing animal models (SteIan & Snead 1997; Danober et al. 1998; Derensart et al. 2001; McCormick & Contreras 2001; BlumenIeld & Taylor 2003; StraIstrom 2006). We shall return to this matter in Section 4.5.3 below.
PenIield and Jasper stressed that the postulated centrencephalic system is svmmetricallv related to both cerebral hemispheres (in the sense oI radial rather than bilateral symmetry: PenIield & Jasper 1954, p. 43, and Iigures on p. 145 and 173). They denied that this system 'Iunctions by itselI alone, independent oI the cortex and suggested instead that it 'Iunctions normally only by means oI employment oI various cortical areas (PenIield & Jasper 1954, pp. 473-474). They conceived oI it as a convergently innervated upper brainstem system serving to coordinate and integrate the Iunctional economy oI the Iorebrain as a whole, intimately involved in conscious and volitional Iunctions as well as in the laying down oI memories across the liIespan (PenIield & Jasper 1954, pp. 140-145; 282).
7 3. Bringing the centrencephalic proposal up to date.
A valuable review oI the centrencephalic proposal in light oI developments up till the end oI the 1980s is provided by Thompson (1993, published posthumously). He calls attention to the relevance oI the clinical literature on so called 'subcortical dementia to the centrencephalic theory, and Iurther suggests that animal evidence Ior a subcortical 'general learning system may supply some oI the anatomical detail leIt unspeciIied by PenIield and Jasper. This 'general learning system is deIined by neural structures which when damaged produce deIicits in each member oI a set oI highly diverse learning tests Ior rats. As identiIied through a long-term research program conducted by Thompson and colleagues, it consists oI the basal ganglia, including the substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area, ventrolateral thalamus, superior colliculus, median raphe and pontine reticular Iormation. The Iunctional signiIicance oI key members oI this constellation (which has access to sensory inIormation independently oI the cortex) will be considered in some detail in Section 4, below, Ior which the Iollowing preliminary considerations will set the stage.
The central claim oI the PenIield and Jasper hypothesis is a claim regarding systems-level organization oI neural Iunctions. The idea that a system can be 'anatomically subcortical but Iunctionally supra-cortical is a statement about brain macrosystems and how they relate and interact with one another. It is most easily approached Irom the side oI the 'Iinal common path oI all brain output as Iar as actual behavior is concerned, namely brainstem and spinal motoneuron pools. Not only are these clusters oI Iinal output cells invariably innervated by multiple sources oI aIIerence (Kuypers & Martin 1982; Nudo & Masterton 1988; Ugolini 1995; GraI et al. 2002), but individual motoneurons receive synaptic input Irom diverse sources utilizing diIIerent transmitters (Holstege 1991; Wentzel et al. 1995). These sources include spinal and brainstem pattern generators (Grillner 2003), various territories oI the brain stem reticular Iormation (Jordan 1998), and a multitude oI both direct and indirect brainstem and Iorebrain aIIerents, among which the indirect ones oIten are relayed via the reticular Iormation (Zahm 2006).
Thus the Iact that the motor cortex maintains direct connections with brainstem and spinal motoneurons by no means implies that it ever is in sole command oI behavior. At every level oI its descending innervation oI motoneuron pools it is but one oI many inputs determining Iinal outcomes. Moreover, the motor cortex accounts Ior but a Iraction oI descending cortical output, and is responsible Ior only select Iorms oI distal behavior (Lawrence & Kyupers 1968; Kuypers 1982, 1987; Lang & Schieber 2003). In such a setting the idea that the output oI a subcortical structure might over-ride a cortical one and in this sense could exercise supra-cortical control over behavior is hardly controversial. When an act oI deliberate eIIort (say driven by preIrontal executive systems) is successIul in overriding or inhibiting a given behavioral tendency, the cortex is in command oI behavior, temporarily exercising determining control over its course. The Iact that such eIIort does not always succeed (say in the Iace oI suIIicient magnitudes oI Iear, hunger or pain) means that the Irontal executive can be overridden by more primitive mechanisms. When a subcortical source prevails in such competitive interactions, an anatomically subcortical system has exercised supra-cortical Iunctional control over behavior.
It is necessary, in other words, to distinguish 'higher in the sense oI cognitive sophistication Irom 'higher in control terms. In this light the PenIield and Jasper proposal amounts to a claim that certain upper brainstem systems in receipt oI convergent cortical projections occupy a 8 superordinate position in the latter sense. As we shall see in detail in subsequent sections, the diverse hemispheric as well as brainstem input to these structures equips them Ior the kind oI superordinate decision making crucial Ior the global sequencing and control oI behavior (Prescott et al. 1999). It is also within processes dedicated to 'integration Ior action that we shall Iind a well-deIined Iunctional role Ior a particular mode oI neural organization that qualiIies as conscious, in good agreement with the PenIield and Jasper proposal. To set the stage Ior a treatment oI that more demanding topic in Sections 4 and 5, two lines oI evidence regarding brainstem Iunction that bear on their proposal will be brieIly reviewed.
3.1. The Sprague effect
Complete removal oI the posterior visual areas oI one hemisphere in the cat (parietal areas included) renders the animal proIoundly and permanently unresponsive to visual stimuli in the halI oI space opposite the cortical removal (Sprague 1966; Sherman 1974; Wallace et al. 1989). The animal appears blind in a manner resembling the cortical blindness that Iollows radical damage to the geniculostriate system in humans. Yet inIlicting additional damage on such a severely impaired animal at the midbrain level restores the animal`s ability to orient to and to localize stimuli in the Iormerly blind Iield (Sprague 1966; Sherman 1977; Wallace et al. 1989). This is accomplished by removing the contralateral superior colliculus or by an intervention as small as a kniIe-cut that severs Iibers running in the central portion oI the collicular commissure. That is, adding a small amount oI damage in the brainstem to the cortical damage 'cures what appeared to be a behavioral eIIect oI massive cortical damage. The restored visual capacity is limited essentially to the ability to orient to and approach the location oI moving visual stimuli in space (Wallace et al. 1989). Visual pattern discrimination capacity does not recover aIter the midbrain intervention (Loop & Sherman 1977), though the midbrain mechanism can be shown to play a role even in such tasks (Sprague 1991).
The Sprague eIIect is a consequence oI secondary eIIects generated at the brainstem level by the unilateral cortical removal (Hikosaka & Wurtz 1989; Hovda & Villablanca 1990; Jiang et al. 2003). The damage not only deprives the ipsilateral superior colliculus oI its normal and proIuse cortical input (Palmer et al. 1972; Sprague 1975; Berson & McIlwain 1983; Harting et al. 1992), but unbalances collicular Iunction via indirect projection pathways. ChieI oI these is the powerIul inhibitory projection Irom the substantia nigra to the colliculus, which crosses the midline in a narrow central portion oI the collicular commissure (Wallace et al. 1990; McHaIIie et al. 1993; Sprague 1996; Ior additional possibilities, see Durmer & Rosenquist 2001). The 'restorative interventions partially correct this imbalance, allowing the collicular mechanism to resume at least part oI its normal Iunctional contribution to behavior, with partial restoration oI vision as a result.
The point is underscored by the analogous circumstances pertaining to the neglect oI one halI oI space that Iollows more limited inactivation oI the cortex (by reversible cooling) at the junction oI occipital, parietal and temporal lobes in one hemisphere oI the cat. This neglect too liIts upon inactivation (by reversible cooling) oI the superior colliculus opposite to the cortical inactivation (Lomber & Payne 1996). Analogous restorative eIIects oI midbrain damage on neglect caused by Irontal cortical damage have been observed in a human patient (Weddell 2004). Though the unawareness Ieatured in cases oI unilateral neglect in humans is Iar Irom a simple entity (see review by Mesulam 1999), it bears on our topic by being perhaps the closest approximation to an impairment that includes speciIic eIIects on consciousness produced by localized cortical damage 9 (Driver & Vuilleumier 2001; Rees 2001; see also Jiang et al. 2003).
The Sprague eIIect demonstrates that hidden in the hemianopia or neglect caused by cortical damage lies a deIicit on the part oI a brainstem visual mechanism disabled as a secondary eIIect oI the cortical removal. This means that a Iunctional deIicit Iollowing damage limited to the cortex cannot as a matter oI course be taken to reIlect an exclusively cortical contribution to Iunctional capacity, since the deIicit may reIlect 'remote eIIects on brainstem systems as well. As Sprague originally expressed it: 'The heminanopia that Iollows unilateral removal oI the cortex that mediates visual behavior cannot be explained simply in classical terms oI interruption oI the visual radiations that serve cortical Iunction. Explanation oI the deIicit requires a broader point oI view, namely, that visual attention and perception are mediated at both Iorebrain and midbrain levels, which interact in their control oI visually guided behavior. (Sprague 1966, p. 1547). That conclusion agrees well with the PenIield and Jasper perspective reviewed in the Ioregoing, and it tells us that without cognizance oI potential subcortical contributions to a deIicit caused by cortical damage, the scope oI Iunctions attributed to the cortex will be counterIactually inIlated.
3.2. Target selection in the midbrain
Though superIicially inconspicuous, the superior colliculus in the rooI ('tectum) oI the midbrain exhibits considerable structural and Iunctional complexity. Long known to play a role in 'visual grasping or 'Ioveation (Hess et al. 1946; Schiller & Koerner 1971), Iurther study has revealed unexpected sophistication in its Iunctional organization (Sparks 1999; Krauzlis et al. 2004; Keller et al. 2005; May 2005). It is the only site in the brain in which the spatial senses are topographically superposed in laminar Iashion within a common, premotor, Iramework Ior multi- eIIector control oI orienting (Merker 1980). Its Iunctional role appears to center on convergent integration oI diverse sources oI inIormation bearing on spatially triggered replacement oI one behavioral target by another, and evidence is accumulating Ior a collicular role in target selection (Wurtz & Mohler 1974; Schlag-Rey et al. 1992; Glimcher & Sparks 1992; Basso & Wurtz 1998; Horowitz & Newsome 1999; Basso & Wurtz 2002; McPeek & Keller 2004; Krauzlis et al. 2004; Carello & Krauzlis 2004; Cavanaugh & Wurtz 2004; see also Grobstein 1988, pp. 44-45). Such a role has direct implications Ior the topic oI superordinate control Iunctions.
A collicular role in target selection is unlikely to be a passive reIlection oI decisions taken in other structures. It is not Iully accounted Ior by the powerIul input it receives Irom the substantia nigra (Basso & Wurtz 2002), and the diversity oI collicular aIIerents precludes any one oI them Irom exercising sole control over collicular Iunction. These aIIerents include a wide range oI brainstem (Edwards et al. 1979; Edwards 1980) and visual as well as nonvisual cortical sources (Kawamura & Konno 1979; Sherman et al. 1979; Harting et al. 1992; Harting et al. 1997; Collins et al. 2005). Cortical aIIerents are monosynaptic, originating in layer V pyramidal cells, placing the colliculus as close to the cortex as two cortical layers are to one another. In the cat they include some 17 visual areas (Harting et al. 1992), and in primates contributions Irom both the dorsal (parietal cortex) and the ventral (temporal cortex) 'streams oI the visual system (Fries 1984; Webster et al. 1993, Steele & Weller 1993). Any sensory modality used in phasic orienting behavior appears to receive obligatory representation in the colliculus. Besides the major spatial senses oI vision, audition and somesthesis they include pain (Wang & Redgrave 1997) and exotic ones such as inIrared (Hartline et al. 1978), electroceptive (Bastian 1982), magnetic (Nemec et al. 2001), and echolocation systems (Valentine & Moss 1997), depending on species. 10
In the colliculus these diverse convergent inputs are arranged in topographically organized sheets layered one upon the other through the depths oI the colliculus (Harting et al. 1992; May 2005). Intrinsic collicular circuitry distributes excitatory as well as inhibitory collicular activity within and across layers and across major collicular subdivisions (Mize et al. 1994; Behan & Kime 1996; Lee et al. 1997; Meredith & Ramoa 1998; Binns 1999; zen et al. 2000; Zhu & Lo 2000; Doubell et al. 2003; Bell et al. 2003; Meredith & King 2004). There is thus no dirth oI complex intrisic collicular circuitry only beginning to be systematically charted Ior collicular decision- making based upon its diverse sources oI aIIerence.
The collicular role in target selection is accordingly likely to be causal (Carello & Krauzlis 2004; McPeek & Keller 2004; see also Findlay & Walker 1999; Yarrow et al. 2004; and Section 4.2, below). This would place the colliculus at the Iunctional apex rather than bottom oI control processes in its domain. The selection oI a target Ior behavior is the brain`s Iinal output in that regard. It is the pivotal event Ior which all other processes are but a preparation, summing them up in the actual decision to settle on one target Ior action rather than another (McFarland & Sibly 1975; Dean & Redgrave 1984; Allport 1987; Tyrrell 1993; Brooks 1994; Isa & Kobayashi 2004).
The Iunctional prediction Irom the loss oI such a structure is not the absence oI target acquisition, but its impoverishment. Not only is the brain redundantly organized in this regard (Schiller et al. 1979; Tehovnik et al. 1994; Schall 1997; Lomber et al. 2001), but the loss oI a superordinate Iunction in a layered control architecture does not disable the system as a whole (Brooks 1986, 1989; Prescott et al. 1999), just as a well organized army need not cease Iunctioning on the loss oI its commander. A macaque with experimental collicular lesions is not incapable oI moving its eyes onto targets, but exhibits a reduced variety oI eye and orienting movements and is indistractible, a common Iinding in other species as well (Denny-Brown 1962; Schneider 1967; Casagrande & Diamond 1974; Goodale & Murison 1975; Albano & Wurtz 1978; Schiller et al. 1979; Merker 1980; Mort et al. 1980; Schiller & Lee 1994). This may reIlect a compromized scope and sophistication oI target selection, and the role oI the intact colliculus would accordingly instantiate the PenIield and Jasper conception oI a highest integrative function which while anatomicallv subcortical is functionallv supra-cortical.
4. Integration for action
As noted in Section 3 above, in drawing the contrast between 'higher in cognitive terms and 'higher in control terms, competition Ior control over behavior ends only at the stage oI the 'Iinal common path oI motoneurones. It is along that approach, among upper brainstem mechanisms oI 'integration Ior action, that we shall identiIy a prototype organization Ior conscious Iunction. The issue takes us to the very origin oI the vertebrate brain plan, which is not only cephalized, but centralized. Not all animals rely on centralized neural organization to control behavior, even when possessed oI a brain. A number oI invertebrate Iorms, including insects, concentrate considerable neural resources to segmental ganglia. Their brain is in a sense no more than the anterior-most oI these ganglia, in receipt oI the output oI the specialized receptors oI the head. It does not necessarily exercise a command Iunction in the sense oI central control oI behavior (see Altman & Kien 1989).
The decentralized neural control oI an insect such as the ant allows its body to survive without its brain. Moreover, iI given adequate somatic stimulation in this condition, it will perIorm many oI 11 the complex behaviors in its repertoire with apparent competence, though naturally without relation to the distal environment (Snodgrass, 1935). A vertebrate, on the other hand, does not survive Ior more than seconds aIter the loss oI its brain, since in vertebrates even vital Iunctions are under central brain control. The diIIerence with respect to insects is underscored by the contrasting disposition oI motor neurons. In insects they are concentrated to segmental ganglia but are rare in the brain (Snodgrass 1935), while in vertebrates they populate the brain in sets oI distinctively organized motor nuclei. Motor control in vertebrates has moved up,`` as it were, to that end oI the neuraxis which leads in locomotion and is in receipt oI the output oI the chieI exteroceptors (cI. Grillner et al. 1997).
The basic organizational Ieatures oI the vertebrate brain are highly conserved across taxa despite unequal development oI one or another oI its senses or subdivisions (Nieuwenhuis et al. 1998). All vertebrates, that is, have 'in outline the same brain plan, assembled Irom primitive beginnings in chordate ancestry (Northcutt 1996b; Butler & Hodos 1996; Holland & Holland 1999). The prominent role oI large, image-Iorming eyes and their central connections in this development came to exert a proIound eIIect on the manner in which the vertebrate brain plan was centralized, with implications Ior our understanding oI the way in which 'higher in cognitive terms relates to 'higher in control terms. That development involves the integrative machinery straddling the so called synencephalon, or junction between midbrain and diencephalon, to which we now turn.
4.1. The synencephalic bottleneck and how the vertebrate brain came to be centralized around it.
There was a time in pre-vertebrate ancestry when the midbrain and diencephalon alone, or rather the Iirst rostral diIIerentiations oI the neural tube that can be homologized with the vertebrate midbrain and diencephalon (Holland et al. 1994; Lacalli 1996, 2001; Wicht 1996; Holland & Holland 1999, 2001), constituted the Iunctionally highest and also anatomically most rostral subdivision oI the neuraxis. It housed the neural circuitry connecting a primitive, unpaired 'Irontal eye and other rostral sensory equipment (Lacalli 1996) with premotor cells in cephalochordate Iilter Ieeders (represented today by Amphioxus, the lancelet). As Iar as is known they lacked a sense oI smell, and they were without a telencephalon altogether (Holland et al. 1994; Butler 2000).
Though our brain nomenclature historically groups the diencephalon together with the telencephalon to make up the Iorebrain, there is nothing Iundamental about such a grouping, as the above phylogenetic circumstances show. Rather, Ior what Iollows it will be convenient to retain the primitive grouping oI midbrain and diencephalon together under the label mesodiencephalon or 'optic brain. In all vertebrates these two segments oI the neuraxis, along with the transitional 'synencephalon (pretectum) wedged between them, house the primary terminations oI the optic tract (cI. Butler 2000). The latter covers their external surIaces in the Iorm oI a ribbon oI Iibers running obliquely Irom the optic chiasm beneath the hypothalamus across the diencephalon and mesencephalon up to the latter`s rooI ('tectum). Along the way it innervates structures as diIIerent as hypothalamus, ventral thalamus, dorsal thalamus, pretectum, accessory optic nuclei and superior colliculus (tectum). The same territory also houses some oI the major integrative structures of broad functional scope common to all vertebrates (cI. Fig. 3).
The principal poles oI this integrative machinery are the hypothalamus Iorming the Iloor oI the 12 diencephalon on the one hand, and the superior colliculus Iorming the rooI oI the midbrain on the other. The Iormer is an intricate nuclear aggregate critical Ior the mutual regulation and integration oI a vertebrate`s entire repertoire oI goal-directed, motivated behavior covering exploratory, Ioraging, ingestive, deIensive, aggressive, sexual, social, and parental modes oI behavior (Swanson 2000), to name the principal ones. The other pole, colliculus/tectum, serves the intermodal integration oI the spatial senses by which vertebrates relate to their surroundings via coordinated orienting movements oI eyes, head and body, as already summarized in Section 3.2 above. Between these two is wedged additional integrative machinery in the Iorm oI midbrain reticular Iormation, ventral thalamus, periaqueductal gray, the ventral tegmental/substantia nigra pivot oI the striatal system, as well as 'locomotor centers and basic mechanisms serving navigation, to some oI which we shall return in subsequent sections.
This concentration oI conserved integrative machinery to the mesodiencephalon, I suggest, reIlects the costs and beneIits oI evolving image-Iorming eyes in the ancestors oI vertebrates (cI. Northcutt 1996a). Full use oI the potential powers oI visual guidance meant evolving solutions to an intricate set oI sensori-motor problems. The conIounding oI sensory inIormation by the sensory consequences oI movement (re-aIIerence: von Holst & Mittelstaedt 1950) is particularly problematic Ior image-Iorming eyes, requiring their stabilization with respect to the world during movement. This is done by vestibular counter-rotation punctuated by quick resets oI the eyes, which concentrates blurring-time to the brieI reset episodes. Thus vision alone among all the senses features independent spatial mobilitv of the receptor arrav itself, and a Iull-Iledged oculomotor system was evolved by the immediate ancestors oI true vertebrates (Fritsch et al. 1990; Wicht 1996, p. 253; Braun 1996, p. 272). The reIlex circuitry connecting vestibular and oculomotor nuclei, centered on the medial longitudinal Iasciculus, is also among the most conservative and basic Ieatures oI the brainstem in all vertebrates (Windle & Baxter 1936; Carpenter 1991).
Yet with eyes Iree to turn in their orbits there is no longer a Iixed relation between retinal location and spatial direction relative to body or head, nor to the localizing Iunction oI any sensory modality which (in whole or in part) bears a Iixed relation to the head. Hence the need Ior intermodal integration, Ior which the sensory integrating mechanism oI colliculus/tectum present in the rooI oI the midbrain oI even jawless vertebrates provides the basic, early and conserved solution (Iwahori et al. 1999; Zompa & Dubuc 1996). But once these basic problems oI vision were solved, a bonus was within reach: mobile eyes present a highly eIIicient means Ior sampling the environment, provided their control can be linked to motivational mechanisms ensuring their appropriate deployment in accordance with shiIting needs.
It appears, in other words, that as the vertebrate brain plan took shape in pre-vertebrate ancestry under pressure oI the evolution oI mobile, image-Iorming eyes a central association between optic control circuitry and major neural mechanism Ior the integration oI behavior/action were Iorged in segments oI the neuraxis covered and innervated by the optic tract (cI. Fig 3). At the time when this optic orienting machinery and associated integrative mechanisms evolved, the Iorebrain was still dominated by olIaction (Wicht & Northcutt 1992; Braun 1996; Northcutt & Wicht 1997). The sense oI smell added no Iundamentally new control requirements comparable to those oI vision, and olIaction accordingly could be integrated with the mesodiencephalic control system by caudally directed Iiber projections. These simply happen to arrive at the 'optic brain Irom an anterior direction, whereas other sensory aIIerents reach it Irom a caudal direction (somatosensory, octavolateral i.e. vestibular/auditory/lateral line/electrosensory, etc.), or 13 directly 'Irom the side through the optic tract (cI. Butler 2000).
Indeed, however much the telencephalon subsequently expanded, even to the point oI burying the mesodiencephalon under a mushrooming mammalian neocortex, no other arrangement was ever needed, and that Ior the most Iundamental oI reasons. No eIIerent nerve has its motor nucleus situated above the level oI the midbrain. This means that the very narrow cross-section oI the brainstem at the junction between midbrain and diencephalon (synencephalon, marked by arrows in the main part oI Fig. 3 and by a black bar in the inset) carries the total extent oI inIormation by which the Iorebrain is ever able to generate, control or inIluence behavior oI any kind. II, thereIore, integration is Ior action, as proposed here Ior the mesodiencephalic control system, inIormation-theory poses no obstacle to having an expansive neocortex make its contribution in this regard by convergent projections onto the highly conserved and pre-existing machinery oI the midbrain and basal diencephalon, which thereIore could retain its old integrative Iunctions (see Fig. 3). Indeed, a bottleneck oI this kind is exactly what is needed in order to convert the massively parallel and distributed inIormation capacity oI the cerebral hemispheres into a limited-capacity, sequential mode oI operation Ieatured in action selection Ior coherent behavior (McFarland & Sibly 1975; Allport 1987; Tyrrell 1993; Baars 1993; Cabanac 1996; Cowan 2001; Mandler 2002, chapt. 2).
Figure 3. Schematic saggittal diagram depicting cortical convergence (in part via the basal ganglia) onto key structures in the region oI the 'synencephalic bottleneck (marked by thick arrows in the main Iigure and by a black bar in the inset). Abbreviations: C, nucleus cuneiIormis; H, hypothalamus (preoptic area included); M, mammillary bodies; MP, 'mesopontine state control nuclei (locus coeruleus, pedunculopontine and laterodorsal tegmental nuclei, and dorsal raphe); MR, midbrain reticular Iormation; N, substanta nigra; P, periaqueductal gray matter; Pt, pretectum; R, red nucleus; SC, superior colliculus; V, ventral tegmental area; Z, zona incerta. The dual axon seen issuing Irom some oI the pyramidal cells oI cortical layer 5 is an illustrative convenience only. Shaded region marks the surIace course oI the optic tract.
14
That is, one need not know anything more about the vertebrate brain than the Iact that its most rostral motoneurons are located below the synencephalic bottleneck to know that the total inIormational content oI the Iorebrain must undergo massive reduction in the course oI its real- time translation into behavior. In the setting oI such obligatory 'data reduction in a stretch oI the neuraxis hosting major systems Ior the global regulation oI behavior, a so Iar unrecognized optimizing principle lies hidden in the mutual dependency that links the motivational, the sensory and the action selection requirements oI the brain`s control tasks. They Iorm a 'selection triangle, whose principle is introduced here Ior the Iirst time. The eIIicient neural implementation oI this principle may harbor the secret oI conscious Iunction itselI.
4.2. The ~selection triangle: a proposed key to conscious function
Elementary necessities oI animal existence such as Iood, shelter or mates are not typically Iound in the same place at any given time, and they each require diIIerent and oIten incompatible behaviors. An animal`s activities accordingly unIold under constraint oI multiple goals or motives derived Irom the evolved and acquired needs it must Iill through the sequence oI its diverse actions over time (Tinbergen 1951; Baerends 1976). The tasks set by these goals compete Ior an animal`s behavioral resources, and since the actions by which they are implemented are always conIined to the present (where they typically are executed one at a time), their scheduling (action selection) Ieatures perpetual trade-oIIs in the time and eIIort that is allocated to them (McFarland & Sibly 1975). The ethological insight that animal behavior rests upon a Ioundation oI diverse goal Iunctions entailing sometimes incompatible tasks or behaviors requiring sequencing/selection entered the so called behavior-based approach to robotics under the name 'action selection (McFarland & Houston, 1981; Brooks 1986; Maes 1990; Tyrell 1993; Blumberg 1994; Prescott et al. 1999; see also Meyer & Wilson 1991).
The needs reIlected in the time budget oI an animal`s task allocations are, however, only one side oI the equation oI eIIicient decision making. The IulIillment oI needs is contingent on available opportunities. These are scattered in the world as ever-shiIting targets oI approach and avoidance among lively and oIten unpredictable contingencies within which they must be detected, located, and identiIied, oIten among multiple competing alternatives, all in real time. Interposed between the needs and their IulIillment through action on the world is the body with its appendages and other resources Ior getting about in the world and manipulating its objects. In concrete terms an action is a time series oI bodily locations and conIormations. These are what connect needs with opportunities. In so doing they themselves become a Iactor in singling out a given opportunity (target) Ior action (target selection). This is so because determining which one oI several available potential targets is the best current choice Ior action will oIten depend not on current needs alone, but additionally on the disposition oI the body relative to those targets (in terms oI its posture and position, movement trajectory, energy reserves, etc., cI. Krding & Wolpert 2006).
In principle each oI the decision domains just invoked action selection, target selection, and motivational ranking may be deIined in its own terms, without regard to the others. They may even make their contributions to behavior independently oI one another (Brooks 1986; Altman & Kien 1989). But Irom the inherent Iunctional relationship just sketched, i.e. the Iact that in terms oI optimal perIormance target selection is not independent of action selection, and neither of these is independent of motivational state (reIlecting changing needs), it Iollows that savings are 15 achievable by exploiting that triangular dependency. It is not possible to reap the beneIits oI those savings short oI Iinding some way oI interIacing the three state spaces each multidimensional in its own right within some common coordinate space (decision Iramework) upon that their separate momentary states interact and constrain one another. This extends to such a tripartite interaction the principle already derived Ior the eIIicient management oI motivational trade-oIIs, namely that diIIerent motives be convertible through a motivational 'common currency and that all relevant motivational variables be subject to convergence among themselves at some point (McFarland & Sibly 1975; see also Cabanac 1992, and Iurther below).
The principle oI a centralized brain system dedicated to this decision domain Iollows Irom this, though not the particulars oI the three-way interIace that must Iorm its center-piece. Evolving such an interIace is Iar Irom a trivial problem, all the more so since its decisions must be made in real time. The brain, oI course, has no direct access to either the target states oI the world or the action states oI the body that must be compared and matched in the light oI motivational priorities. It is saddled with an inverse problem on both sensory and motor sides oI its operations (Kawato et al. 1993; Gallistel 1999). The indirect reIlections oI relevant parameters to which it does have access come to it, moreover, in diverse data Iormats. The diIIerences between the spatial senses among themselves in this regard are mild compared to those between any one oI these senses and the various musculoskeletal articulations and conIigurations they serve to control. How then to compare the Iormer with the latter? Add to this the already mentioned circumstance that every movement conIounds the sensory inIormation needed to guide behavior, and that the needs to be taken into account diIIer not only in urgency but in kind, and the size oI the design problem begins to emerge in outline.
To exploit the savings hidden in the Iunctional interdependence between target selection, action selection and motivation, this conIounded complexity must be radically recast, to allow the three domains to interact directly in real time Ior the determination oI 'what to do next. It is the principal claim oI the present target article that the vertebrate brain incorporates a solution to this decision problem, that it takes the general Iorm oI a neural analog realitv simulation oI the problem space oI the tri-partite interaction, and that the way this simulation is structured constitutes a conscious mode oI Iunction. It equips its bearers with veridical experience oI an external world and their own tangible body maneuvering within it under the inIluence oI Ieelings reIlecting momentary needs, i.e. what we normally call reality. 2 To this end it Ieatures an analog (spatial) mobile 'body (action domain) embedded within a movement-stabilized analog (spatial) 'world (target domain) via a shared spatial coordinate system, subject to bias Irom motivational variables, and supplying a premotor output Ior the control oI the Iull species-speciIic orienting reIlex. The crucial separation oI body and world on which this arrangement hinges has recently been worked out in Iormal terms by David Philipona and colleagues (Philipona et al. 2003, 2004).
We have already seen in Sections 3.2 and 4.1 that the rooI oI the midbrain oI vertebrates houses a sophisticated laminar superposition oI the spatial senses in a pre-motor Iramework Ior orienting. It appears to contain the essential signals Ior bringing these senses into registry (Jay & Sparks 1987; Van Opstal et al. 1995; Groh & Sparks 1996; Populin & Yin 1998; Krauzlis 2001; Zella et al. 2001) and Ior stabilizing the world relative to the body. Such stabilization is likely to utilize not only vestibular inIormation (Bisti et al. 1972; Horowitz et al. 2005), but cerebellar 'decorrelation as well (Dean et al. 2002, 2004; cI. Hirai et al. 1982; May et al. 1990; Niemi- Junkola & Westby 2000; Guillaume & Pelisson 2001). The layered spatial maps in the rooI oI the 16 midbrain would, in other words, represent the vertebrate brain`s Iirst bid Ior an analog simulation oI a distal 'world (Scheibel & Scheibel 1977). We also saw that the other pole oI the 'optic brain, the hypothalamus, houses the basic circuitry Ior regulating and integrating motivational states related to goal-directed behaviors. Its output is brought to bear on the intermediate and deep layers oI the superior colliculus not only by direct projections (Beitz 1982; Rieck et al. 1986), but indirectly, via massive and organized projections Irom hypothalamic nuclei to diIIerent sectors oI the periaqueductal gray substance (see reIs. 36, 37, 39, 222 & 256 in Swanson 2000; Goto et al. 2005).
The periaqueductal gray is a midbrain territory intimately related to the deeper collicular layers. It surrounds the cerebral aqueduct, and plays a critical role in the expression oI a variety oI emotion-related behaviors such as deIensive, aggressive, sexual, vocal and pain-related ones (Fernandez de Molina & Hunsperger 1962; Adams 1979; Panksepp 1982, 1998; Jurgens 1994; Behbehani 1995; Holstege et al. 1996; Lonstein et al. 1998; Mouton 1999; Watt 2000; Kittleberger et al. 2006). Its longitudinal columns are Iunctionally organized in terms oI high- level tasks, goals, strategies, or contexts, such as 'inescapable versus escapable pain (Keay & Bandler 2002). It achieves particular prominence in mammals, and stimulating it electrically in conscious humans evokes powerIul emotional reactions (Nashold et al. 1969; Heath 1975; Iacono & Nashold 1982). Functionally the periaqueductal gray is continous and reciprocally interconnected with the immediately overlying deep layers oI the superior colliculus (Sprague et al. 1961; GroIova et al. 1978; Cadusseau & Roger 1985; Harting et al. 1992, Iig. 27; Wiberg 1992; Gordon et al. 2002; Bittencourt et al. 2005). Here, then, in the intermediate and deep collicular connections with hypothalamus and periaqueductal gray, lies a connective interIace between the brain`s basic motivational systems and the orienting machinery oI the collicular analog 'world.
The third member oI the selection triangle enters this system through the prominent projections Irom the substania nigra to the intermediate collicular layers (Mana & Chevalier 2001; Jiang et al. 2003; see also Sections 3.1 and 3.2). Here the Iinal distillate oI basal ganglia action-related inIormation is interdigitated with the lattice-work oI histochemically deIined compartements that organize the input-output relations oI the intermediate colliculus (Graybiel 1978; Illing & Graybiel 1986; Illing 1992; Harting et al. 1997). It appears, in other words, that the territory extending Irom the dorsal surIace oI the midbrain to the aqueduct houses the connectivity needed to implement a three-way interIace oI the kind outlined in the Ioregoing, and it is hereby proposed to do so. The elements oI this scheme are sketched in Fig. 4.
17
Figure 4. The three principal domains oI 'world (target selection), 'body (action selection), and 'motivation (needs) that must interact to optimize decision processes in real time, portrayed in their proposed 'primary implementation in the rooI oI the midbrain. The extension oI its logic into the Iorebrain, and the cerebral cortex oI mammals in particular, can be conceived in terms oI this primary system 'writ large, as Iollows (cI. Fig. 6 in particular): A dorsolateral to ventromedial path Irom the surIace oI the colliculus to the midbrain aqueduct corresponds to a posterior to Irontal to medial path in the cortex. In the reverse direction, and in Iunctional terms, it reads 'motivation, 'action and 'world. S, I and D: superIicial, intermediate and deep layers oI the superior colliculus, respectively. PAG: the periaqueductal gray matter surrounding the midbrain cerebral aquaduct. Bidirectional arrow aligned with the collicular lamina stand Ior compensatory coordinate transIormations. Drawing based in part on Harting et al. 1997.
Such a conception Iits seamlessly with the proposed role oI the superior colliculus in target selection outlined in section 3.2 above. As noted there, the selection oI a traget Ior action is the Iinal event in the brain`s real-time decision-making regarding 'what to do next. The signiIicance oI gaze control, moreover, goes Iar beyond the matter oI moving eyes-and-head in space: the gaze plays an organizing role in a wide range oI behaviors by 'leading many Iorms oI action, as has been shown in exquisite detail Ior manual reaching and manipulation (Johansson et al. 2001; see also Werner et al. 1997; Stuphorn et al. 2000; Schneider & Deubel 2002; Courjon et al 2004; Jackson et al. 2005). Nor is the output oI the tecto-periaqueductal system limited to the species- speciIic orienting reIlex: it includes escape behavior (Sprague et al. 1961; Merker 1980; Dean et al. 1989) as well as a number oI innate postural schematisms associated with behaviors under periaqueductal control (Holstege et al. 1996; Lonstein et al. 1998).
In its primitive beginnings, the 'world oI the proposed neural reality simulator presumably amounted to no more than a two-dimensional screen-like map oI spatial directions on which potential targets might appear as mere loci oI motion in an otherwise Ieatureless noise Iield, deIined more by their displacement than by any object Ieatures (see Stoerig & Barth 2001, Ior a plausible simulation). Advances on this primitive arrangement apparently proceeded by adding to it more sophisticated inIormation Irom a rostral direction. Thus the ability oI a Irog to side-step 18 stationary barriers during prey-catching is dependent upon input to the tectum Irom the region oI the caudal thalamus and pretectum, just anterior to the tectum (Ewert 1968; Ingle 1973b). With the elaboration oI the telencephalon, culminating in the neocortex oI mammals, the arrangement was expanded Iurther (see Section 4.5), into a Iully articulated, panoramic three-dimensional world composed oI shaped solid objects: the world oI our Iamiliar phenomenal experience.
4.3. Inhabiting a neural simulation
Whether primitive or advanced the Iundamental simpliIying device oI the proposed simulation space is to associate the origin oI its shared body-world coordinate system Ior orienting with the head representation oI its analog body. This does not mean that the coordinate system itselI is head centered (i.e. moves with the head). At brainstem levels it appears, rather, to be oculocentric (Moschovakis & Highstein 1994; Moschovakis 1996; Klier et al. 2001). It means only that the coordinate system origin is lodged in the head representation oI the simulated analog visual body, say in close proximity to its analog eye region. With such a location, a number oI sensory- sensory mismatches and the contamination oI sensory inIormation by movement caused by the largely rotary displacements oI eyes and head involved in perpetual orienting movements can be remedied to a Iirst approximation by spherical coordinate transIormations. This economy oI control helps explain the Iact that at the brainstem level not only eye movements but also head movements, despite their very diIIerent musculo-skeletal demands, utilize a common intermediate control system organized in separate horizontal and vertical, i.e. spherical, coordinates (Grobstein 1989; Masino & Grobstein 1989; Masino & Knudsen 1990; Masino 1992). In humans, covert orienting oI attention as well as the visuomotor map Ior reaching (Vetter et al. 1999; Gawryszewski et al. 2005) appear to be Iramed in spherical coordinates. 3
There is reason to believe that the implicit 'ego-center origin oI this coordinate space is the position we ourselves occupy when we are conscious, and that the analog body and analog world oI that space is what we experience as and call our tangible, concrete body and the external world (cI. Iootnote 2). This would explain the irreducible asymmetry adhering to the relation between perceiving subject and apprehended objects deIining the conscious state: the ego-center places the conscious subject in an inherently 'perspectival, viewpoint-based, relation to the contents oI sensory consciousness. It is Irom there objects are apprehended, objects do not apprehend the subject (cI. Merker 1997). By the same token, the one necessary constituent oI consciousness that can never be an object oI consciousness is that very vantage point itselI, namely the origin oI the coordinate system oI the simulation space. It cannot be an object oI consciousness any more than an eye can see itselI (Schopenhauer 1819, vol. 2, p. 491; see Baars 1988, pp. 327II Ior this and other 'contextual aspects oI consciousness).
Should these reasons appear somewhat abstract and rareIied, there is a Iar more concrete indication to the same eIIect: our very body bears a tell-tale sign allowing us to recognize it as the product oI a neural simulation. Vision diIIers topologically Irom somesthesis and audition by its limited angular subtense, particularly in animals with Irontally directed eyes. The other two senses can be mapped in toto onto a spherical coordinate system Ior orienting, while vision is only partially thus mapped. This is not in itselI a problem, but becomes one given that vision can be directed not only to the external world but to the body itselI. This necessitates some kind oI junction or transition between the distal visual world and the proximal visual body, and there a problem does arise.
19 Though as we have seen the ego-center is present in consciousness by implication only, its location can be determined empirically (Hering 1879; RoeloIs 1959; Howard & Templeton 1966; Cox 1999; Neelon et al. 2004). It is single, and located behind the bridge oI the nose inside our head. From there we appear to conIront the visible world directly through an empty and single cyclopean aperture in the Iront oI our head (Hering 1879; Julesz 1971). Yet that is obviously a mere appearance, since iI we were literally and actually located inside our heads we ought to see not the world but the anatomical tissues inside the Iront oI our skulls when looking. The cyclopean aperture is a convenient neural Iiction through which the distal visual world is 'inserted through a missing part oI the proximal visual body, which is 'without head as it were or, more precisely, missing its upper Iace region (see Harding 1961). Somesthesis by contrast maintains unbroken continuity across this region. The empty opening through which we gaze out at the world betrays the simulated nature oI the body and world that are given to us in consciousness. The essentials oI the arrangement are depicted in highly schematic Iorm in Fig. 5.
Figure 5. Highly schematic depiction oI the nested relation between ego-center, neural body and neural world constituting the analog neural simulation ('reality space) proposed as a solution to the tri-partite selection problem described in the text. Black depicts the physical universe, one part oI which is the physical body (black oval), both oI which are necessarily outside oI consciousness. One part oI the physical body is the physical brain (circle; shaded and unshaded). The heavy black line separating the reality space Irom other Iunctional domains within the brain indicates the exclusion oI those domains Irom consciousness (unshaded). Arrows mark interIaces across which neural inIormation may pass without entering consciousness. The designation ego-center is a sensorimotor construct unrelated to the concept oI selI-consciousness. See text Ior Iurther details. 20
The simulated nature oI our body and world is Iurther supported by a number oI phenomena that alert us to the synthetic nature oI what we typically take to be physical reality itselI, i.e. phenomena such as inattention blindness, change blindness and allied eIIects (Rensink et al. 1997; Simon & Chabris 1999; O`Reagan et al. 2000; Rensink 2002). Such 'deletions Irom consciousness can be countered by appropriately placed microstimulation oI the superior colliculus (Cavanaugh & Wurtz 2004). These various indications all support the conclusion that what we conIront in sensory consciousness is indeed a simulated (synthetic) world and body.
As central residents oI that simulation we are subject to ever shiIting moods, Ieelings, urges, emotions and impulses. These, then, would be those aspects oI the brain`s motivational dynamics that reach consciousness (cI. Panksepp 1982, 1998; Cabanac 1992). The reason they do so, according to the present proposal, is their relevance to the tripartite determination oI what to do next, as outlined in the Ioregoing. A striking illustration oI this principle is aIIorded by respiratory control (Merker 2005). It is automatic and unconscious as long as partial pressures oI blood gases stay within normal bounds, yet intrudes most IoreceIully on consciousness in the Iorm oI an acute sense oI panic when they go out oI bounds. Extreme blood gas values are an indication that urgent action on the environment such as removing an airway obstruction or getting out oI a carbon dioxide Iilled pit may be imperative. That is what suddenly makes action selection and target selection relevant to respiratory control, which accordingly 'enters consciousness in the Iorm oI a powerIul Ieeling oI suIIocation.
This example Iurther illustrates the lack oI any necessary connection between cognitive sophistication and the reason Ior something to enter consciousness. Even quite elementary Iunctions may beneIit Irom the eIIiciency provided by the triangular action-target-motivation interIace oI conscousness. It serves optimal decision-making in real time, on the broad Iront oI its tripartite inIormation base, concisely packaged in its multivariate simulation space. Such a utility is particularly valuable when a moment`s hesitation may make a big diIIerence in outcome, as in the suIIocation example (but also in, say, agonistic encounters), quite apart Irom anything to do with advanced cognition. The evolution oI such a utility could accordingly proceed independently oI cognitive capacity, to crown the optic brain with its tectal machinery at the very outset oI the vertebrate lineage, at a time when the telencephalon was still largely devoted to olIaction.
In its peculiar nesting oI a body inside a world around an ego-center in a shared coordinate space subject to motivational bias, this interIace possesses the essential attributes oI phenomenal consciousness. As implemented in the midbrain and diencephalon, the arrangement is proposed to have served as the innate core and prototype on which all Iurther elaboration oI conscious contents was subsequently built. Centered on the colliculus extending into periaqueductal gray, it will be Iurther deIined in Section 4.5 below. A Ielicitous term Ior the Iunctional state supported by the basic (mesodiencephalic) prototype arrangement would accordingly be 'primary consciousness (Hodgson 1878; Petty 1998; Trevarthen & Reddy in press).
4.4. Coherent, motivated behavior under sensory guidance in the absence of the cerebral cortex
The superordinate Iunctional position attributed to mesodiencephalic mechanisms in previous sections is supported by a number oI empirical Iindings that receive a uniIied interpretation in its 21 light. When the behavioral eIIects oI local brain stimulation are systematically surveyed by means oI depth electrodes it is common to Iind that the most coherent, integrated and natural- looking (whole, or 'molar) behavioral reactions be they orienting, exploration, or a variety oI appetitive, consummatory, and deIensive behaviors are evoked by stimulation oI diencephalic and midbrain sites, while stimulation at more rostral or caudal levels tends to evoke more Iragmentary or incomplete behaviors (Bard 1928; Hess & Brugger 1943; Kaada 1951; Hess 1954; Hunsperger 1956; Fernandez de Molina & Hunsperger 1962; Hunsperger 1963; Hunsperger & Bucher 1967; SchaeIer & Schneider 1968; Orlovsky & Shik 1976; Adams 1979; Carrive et al. 1989; Schuller & Radtke-Schuller 1990; Bandler & Keay 1996; Brandao et al. 1999; Holstege & Georgiadis 2004).
All oI the behaviors just mentioned are also exhibited by experimental animals aIter their cerebral cortex is removed surgically, either in adulthood or neonatally. Best studied in this regard are rodents (Woods 1964; Wishaw 1990). AIter recovery, decorticate rats show no gross abnormalities in behavior that would allow a casual observer to identiIy them as impaired in an ordinary captive housing situation, though an experienced observer would be able to do so on the basis oI cues in posture, movement and appearance (Whishaw 1990, on which what Iollows relies, supplemented by additional sources as indicated). They stand, rear, climb, hang Irom bars and sleep with normal postures (VanderwolI et al. 1978). They groom, play (Pellis et al. 1992; Panksepp et al. 1994), swim, eat, and deIend themselves (VanderwolI et al. 1978) in ways that diIIer in some details Irom those oI intact animals, but not in outline. Either sex is capable oI mating successIully when paired with normal cage mates (Carter et al. 1982; Whishaw & Kolb 1985), though some behavioral components oI normal mating are missing and some are abnormally executed. Neonatally decorticated rats as adults show the essentials oI maternal behavior which, though deIicient in some respects, allows them to raise pups to maturity. Some, but not all, aspects oI skilled movements survive decortication (Whishaw and Kolb 1988), and decorticate rats perIorm as readily as controls on a number oI learning tests (Oakley 1983). Much oI what is observed in rats (including mating and maternal behavior) is also true oI cats with cortical removal in inIancy: they move purposeIully, orient themselves to their surroundings by vision and touch (as do the rodents), and are capable oI solving a visual discrimination task in a T-maze (Bjursten et al. 1976; see also Bard & Rioch 1937).
The Iact that coherent and well-organized molar behaviors are elicited by local stimulation in the mesodiencephalic region oI intact animals and that coherent motivated behavior under environmental guidance is displayed spontaneously by animals lacking a cerebral cortex means that the neural mechanisms required to motivate, orchestrate and provide spatial guidance Ior these behaviors are present in the parts oI the brain that remain aIter decortication. Some aspects oI these behaviors are dependent upon basal ganglia and basal Iorebrain Iunctions remaining aIter the loss oI their principal (cortical) source oI aIIerence (Wishaw 1990, p. 246), while the basic competences oI decorticate animals reIlect the capacity oI upper brainstem mechanisms to sustain the global patterning, emotional valence, and spatial guidance oI the postures and movements oI orienting, deIense, aggression, play, and other appetitive and consummatory behaviors (Adams 1979; Sakuma & PIaII 1979; Panksepp 1982; Masino 1992; Swanson 2000; Holstege & Georgiadis 2004; Maskos et al. 2005). The particulars oI the dependence oI these behaviors on key structures located in the mesodiencephalic region has been repeatedly reviewed (Swanson 1987, 2000; ten Donkelaar 1988; Houk 1991; Padel 1993; Jurgens 1994; Behbehani 1995; Haber & Fudge 1997; Panksepp 1998; Winn 1998; Mouton 1999; Prescott et al. 1999; Watt 2000; Horvitz 2000; Bassett & Taube 2001; Groenewegen 2003; Watt and Pincus 2004; Zahm 2006). 22
It is into the premotor circuitry oI these ancient and highly conserved upper brainstem mechanism that a wide range oI systems place their bids Ior 'where to look and 'what to do, irrespective oI the level oI sophistication oI any one oI these 'bidding systems. Each oI them has independent access to eIIectors, and their upper brainstem interactions are not inIrequently mediated by collaterals oI such projections. The cerebral cortex is one prominent input to this system through the direct and indirect Iiber projections emphasized in the Ioregoing and sketched in Fig. 3 (see also Swanson 2000; Zahm 2006). This relationship is, however, not a one-way aIIair. In Iact, the manner in which the telencephalon is interIaced and integrated with the mesodiencephalic control system adds Iurther deIinition to the central role oI upper brainstem mechanisms in conscious Iunctions.
4.5. Including the forebrain
Three cortical regions Iigure repeatedly and prominently in studies oI cerebral mechanisms related to attention, neglect and consciousness, namely the posterior parietal cortex, the preIrontal cortex and a medial territory centered on the cingulate gyrus (Posner & Petersen 1990; Lynch et al. 1994; Corbetta 1998; Mesulam 1999; Rees & Lavie 2001; Clower et al. 2001; Baars et al. 2003, Iig. 1; Han et al. 2003; BlumenIeld & Taylor 2003). A special connective and Iunctional relationship exists between these three cortical territories and the mesodiencephalic system outlined in the Ioregoing. It is most easily approached by considering their mutual interIace in the nuclei oI the dorsal thalamus. The latter can be divided into Iirst-order (largely sensory relay) and higher-order ('association) thalamic nuclei (Sherman & Guillery 2001), and it is with the latter, higher-order nuclei, that the mesodiencephalic system maintains an intimate and complex relationship.
The two major higher-order nuclei oI mammals are the mediodorsal nucleus, whose cortical projections deIine the preIrontal cortex, and the pulvinar complex related to a set oI posterior cortical areas, including extrastriate visual areas such as those oI the posterior parietal cortex. Though proposed to serve as thalamic relays Ior cortico-cortical interactions (Sherman & Guillery 2001), these nuclei are not devoid oI extra-telencephalic input, and both receive prominent input Irom the superior colliculus (Benevento & Fallon 1975; Harting et al. 1980; Lyon et al. 2005). AIIerents to the pulvinar originate largely Irom the superIicial collicular layers, while those destined Ior the mediodorsal nucleus are predominantly oI intermediate layer origin. The latter projection targets a zone at the lateral edge oI the mediodorsal nucleus related to the Irontal eye Iields (see Sommer & Wurtz 2004), the cortical territory most directly implicated in unilateral neglect oI Irontal origin (see Mesulam 1999, and reIerences therein).
The cingulate gyrus, Iinally, is related to the mesodiencephalic system by its projections to the intermediate and deep layers oI the colliculus (Sherman et al. 1979; Harting et al. 1992), the periaqueductal gray matter (An et al. 1998; Floyd et al. 2000), and by a conspicuously heavy projection to the :ona incerta (MitroIanis & Mikuletic 1999, Figs. 6, 7). This latter structure is a mammalian derivative oI the ventral thalamus oI comparative terminology mentioned in section 4.1, and has emerged Irom obscurity only recently (see review by MitroIanis, 2005). It sends topographically organized inhibitory projection to the superior colliculus, and reaches up into the thalamus above it to selectively innervate its higher-order nuclei bilaterally, likewise with powerIul GABAergic inhibition (Power et al. 1999; Bartho et al. 2002; Trageser & Keller 2004; Lavallee et al. 2005). 23
Collicular input to the higher-order nuclei is excitatory, while their incertal input is inhibitory. This implies dynamic competition between colliculus and :ona incerta Ior inIluence over the two principal thalamic dependencies oI the preIrontal and the posterior parietal cortex. In this competition the inhibitory incertal element stands under cingulate cortex inIluence and is also in a position to inhibit the colliculus directly and with topographic speciIicity (Ficalora & Mize 1989; Kim et al. 1992; Ma 1996; May et al. 1997). These circumstances cannot but proIoundly aIIect the Iunctional dynamics oI the three cortical territories with which we are concerned. The principal pathways relating them to the mesodiencephalic control system and the higher-order thalamic nuclei are depicted schematically in Fig. 6.
Figure 6. Composite diagram illustrating the interIace between the mesodiencephalic system and the thalamocortical complex. Principal pathways by which the superior colliculus and the :ona incerta relate to one another as well as to the dorsal thalamus and the cerebral cortex are indicated in black heavy lines. Excitatory connections end in a 'Y, inhibitory connections in a 'T. Abbreviations: P: parietal; F: Irontal; C: cingulate cortex; SC: superior colliculus; ZI: zona incerta; Pul: pulvinar complex; MD: mediodorsal nucleus oI the thalamus. The central sulcus is marked by an asterisk. See text Ior Iurther detail.
Supplying a key node in the relations depicted in Fig. 6, the :ona incerta is monosynaptically (and oIten reciprocally and bilaterally) connected with on the order oI 50 separate structures along the entire length oI the neuraxis Irom spinal cord to olIactory bulb (author`s own conservative inventory oI the literature, not counting connections with individual cortical areas separately). Internally, the :ona incerta Ieatures ubiquitous mutual connectivity in a setting oI cytoarchitectonic and cytological heterogeneity in which GABAergic cells are prominent (Benson et al. 1991, 1992; Nicolelis et al. 1992; see Power & MitroIanis 1999, 2001; and Bartho et al. 2002, p. 1002 Ior connective details). A combination oI reciprocal external connectivity 24 with ubiquitous internal mutual inhibition is the theoretically optimal solution Ior implementing gobal competitive interaction among structures separated by long distances (see McFarland 1965; Snaith and Holland 1990; and Prescott et al. 1999, p. 27-29 Ior background). The :ona incerta accordingly may implement such a scheme, and is hereby proposed to do so, as schematically illustrated in Fig. 7.
Figure 7. Schematic diagram oI :ona incerta connectivity to the rest oI the brain and oI its subdivisions to one another, depicted bilaterally to emphasize the prominent commissural, 'midline-straddling, nature oI incertal connectivity. Ovals represent the principal incertal subnuclei, shown physically separated Ior graphical clarity. Labels R, D, V and C mark the rostral, dorsal, ventral and caudal subnuclei, respectively, and connections among them. Filled squares indicate that each subnucleus projects to all subnuclei on the opposite side. Open circles stand Ior incertal connections with the rest oI the brain (typically reciprocal in nature). Shaded regions stand symbolically Ior the Iact that Iunctionally deIined subregions oI the :ona incerta (sensory modalities, motor, limbic, etc.) oIten cut across its nuclear subdivisions. Inserts on the left summarize the two connective schemes that appear to be combined in the :ona incerta. Long-distance (external) connections, Ior which wiring-eIIiciency is at a premium, connect n entities to a central hub (the :ona incerta itselI) by 2n (i.e. reciprocal) connections (expandable to new targets at the low cost oI 2). Internal connectivity within the :ona incerta (wiring eIIiciency not at a premium), by contrast, appears to Iollow the n(n-1) connective principle (lower diagram, expanding the Iilled central circle oI the upper diagram). The scheme as a whole idealizes evidence supplied by the pioneering studies oI MitroIanis and colleagues (reIerences in the text), and awaits reIinement in the light oI Iurther detailed studies.
The :ona incerta or the ventral thalamus oI non-mammals thus supplies the integrative machinery oI the optic brain with a connective hub that seems designed to conduct mutually inhibitory trials oI strength among a truly diverse set oI aIIerents. They include, but are not limited to, visual, auditory, somatosensory, vestibular (Horowitz et al. 2005), cerebellar, striatal, collicular, motor, and limbic ones. The outcome oI the competition i.e. a neural decision is conveyed to the intermediate and deep layers oI the superior colliculus by a topographically 25 organized inhibitory projection, as already mentioned. The collicular return projection to the :ona incerta like that oI many incertal aIIerents is non-topographic, implying greater speciIicity oI incertal inIluence over the colliculus than the reverse. At the same time incertal inhibitory output ascends into the association nuclei oI the dorsal thalamus, establishing the :ona incerta as a connective bridge straddling the mesodiencephalic and the thalamocortical systems.
Coupled with the scope oI its connectivity along the neuraxis, this nodal position oI the :ona incerta lends it a potentially strategic role as an arbiter oI moment to moment decision making 'in the light oI all available evidence. As in the case oI collicular target selection, the loss oI such a high-level Iunction need not generate conspicuous behavioral deIicits, and does not appear to do so in rats with incertal lesions (Thompson & Bachman 1979). Rather, it would be expected to issue in suboptimal levels oI resource allocation relative to shiIting patterns oI multiply interacting opportunities and needs. Preliminary indications regarding the great diversity and complexity oI neuronal response properties in the :ona incerta are worthy oI note in this connection (Crutcher et al. 1980; Kendrick et al. 1991; Nicolelis et al. 1993; Ma 1996; Mungarndee et al. 2002).
Finally, the :ona incerta lies in immediate anterior continuity with the prerubral Iield and rostral interstitial nucleus oI the medial longitudinal Iasciculus, i.e. with the rostral-most pole oI the intermediate control system Ior orienting organized in spherical coordinates mentioned in Section 4.3, above. This rostral pole is specialized Ior vertical movement, while the system`s horizontal components are Iound Iarther caudally, in paramedian reticular structures extending into the pons. Could it be that the zona incerta supplies a kind oI origin Ior this coordinate system, a midline-straddling point oI unity connected directly and via the colliculus to the rest oI the coordinate space (Leichnetz et al. 1987; Kolmac et al. 1998; Giolli et al. 2001)? Its population oI omnipause neurons are at least compatible with such an eventuality (Hikosaka & Wurtz 1983; Ma 1996). Nothing would be more elegant than to lodge the Iinal arbitration oI 'what to do next in a winner-take-all selI-inhibitory network supplying the origin oI the coordinate system that controls the orienting movements which execute that decision once made. As a primary perspectival viewpoint charged with changing motives it would possess the essential attributes oI a selI (see Section 4.3 above). Prominent incertal aIIerence Irom cingulate cortex would Iit such a role (cI. NorthoII et al. 2006 Ior medial cortex and selI), but short oI Iurther evidence, the suggestion must remain speculative.
4.5.1. Collicular gamma oscillations and cortical ~binding. The superior colliculus is the only place outside oI the cerebral cortex in which Iast oscillations in the gamma range have been shown to occur and to behave in a manner paralleling in all signiIicant respects that oI the cortex (Brecht et al. 1998, 1999, 2001). At the cortical level such oscillatory activity has been proposed to serve a 'binding Iunction Ior consciousness (in the sense oI integrating disparate elements oI unitary conscious percepts) on circumstantial grounds (Engel et al. 1999; Engel and Singer 2001; Singer 2001). As we shall see one need not, however, ascribe a unique role to gamma oscillations in either binding or consciousness to recognize that they may have consequences Ior cortico- collicular integration nevertheless.
Though sometimes portrayed as 'the problem oI consciousness, the acuteness oI the cortical binding problem must not be exaggerated. The pyramid architecture oI point-to-point interareal connectivity within topographically organized cortical sensory domains ensures that corresponding points on areal topographies Ieaturing diIIerent Iunctional content (e.g. contour 26 and color) are connectivelv and thus coherently related even though the areas themselves occupy separate locations in the cortical sheet (Felleman & VanEssen 1991; Merker 2004a, Fig. 2 and Iootnote 2 oI that paper).
The laminar superposition oI numerous cortical areas in the colliculus takes this principle Iurther. Here the joining oI corresponding points on diIIerent cortical maps takes place by direct laminar superposition oI topographic projections oI diIIerent cortical areas within a uniIied collicular topography. Thus the output oI diIIerent cortical areas are brought within the compass oI the dendritic trees oI single collicular neurons, which oIten straddle collicular laminar boundaries (Langer & Lund 1974; Laemle 1983; Ma et al. 1990; Albers & Meek 1991). Tight temporal synchrony oI neuronal Iiring in separate cortical loci (through coupling to gamma oscillations) increases the probability that their joint activity will Iall within the temporal window oI integration oI any neuron whether cortical or subcortical to which they project convergently (Abeles 1982; Knig 1996). Synchronous activation oI corresponding loci on separate cortical maps would accordingly assist such activity in crossing collicular thresholds by summation via the dendritic trees oI convergently innervated collicular cells.
In crossing the collicular threshold whether assisted by gamma synchrony or not cortical activity would gain access to the mesodiencephalic system in all its ramiIications, projections to the cortex included (see Fig. 6). This, according to the present account, would be a principal step by which such activity enters awareness. II so, it Iollows that no change in conscious contents should take place without involvement of the mesodiencephalic svstem (centered on the superior colliculus) as outlined here, even when that change is unaccompanied bv eve movements. This prediction is speciIic to the present perspective, and accordingly renders it testable. The means Ior doing so are exempliIied by a recent Iunctional imaging study oI a visual-auditory illusion in humans (Watkins et al. 2006). That study revealed collicular activation associated with awareness oI the illusion, though stimuli were identical on trials in which the illusion was not perceived, and central Iixation was maintained throughout, conIirming the above prediction in this particular instance.
This, then, would be the identity oI the so Iar unidentiIied threshold Ieatured in a recent programmatic proposal regarding conscious Iunction (Crick & Coch 2003). Its above identiIication with the threshold Ior access to the mesodiencephalic system centered on the colliculus (Figs. 4 & 6) is reinIorced by the Iact that only cortical layer V pyramidal cells project to the colliculus. They exhibit a number oI notable specializations: they do not give oII collaterals to the thalamic reticular nucleus on passing through it (Jones 2002), their local intra-cortical connectivity appears stereotyped (Kozloski et al. 2001), and their apical dendrites branch in cortical layer I and carry specialized conductance mechanisms activated by top-down (Ieedback) connections in the superIicial cortical layers (Larkum et al. 2004). This may ensure that activation oI both the IeedIorward and Ieedback cortical system is typically required Ior the cortico-mesencephalic threshold to be crossed, such concurrent activation having been proposed as an essential condition Ior cortical inIormation to reach awareness (Lamme & Spekreijse 2000; see also Merker 2004a, p. 566).
4.5.2. Consciousness and cortical memory. PenIield and Jasper proposed a role Ior the centrencephalic system in both consciousness and the laying down oI cortical memories across the liIe span. A rationale Ior such a memory role is suggested by the present perspective. The perpetual and cumulative nature oI cortical memory recording (Standing 1973; Merker 2004a, b) 27 puts a premium on economy oI storage, i.e. on concentrating memory recording to signiIicant inIormation (HaIt 1998). A criterion Ior doing so is available in the system oI integration Ior action as outlined here: inIormation that is important enough to capture control oI behavior (i.e. by triggering an orienting movement placing its target in Iocal awareness) is also important enough to be consigned to permanent cortical storage. The Iocal presence oI the target obviously will be the greater part oI ensuring such an outcome, but it is likely to be actively supported as well by the system oI dual colliculo-thalamic relays to cortex (cI. Fig. 6). From its parietal and Irontal target areas, accessed in part via so called matrix cell projections Irom the thalamus to the superIicial cortical layers (Jones 1998), the mesodiencephalic inIluence would then propagate and spread through the cortex via intracortical top-down Ieedback connectivity.
The evidence Ior a 'general learning system (which includes the superior colliculus: Thompson 1993), mentioned in the introduction to Section 3 above, would seem to bear on this proposal as well. In Iact, the severe capacity limitations oI so called working memory (Baddeley 1992; Cowan 2001) are likely to derive in large part Irom the mesodiencephalic bottleneck which all attended (i.e. conscious) inIormation must access according to the present proposal, just at the point where the parallel distributed data Iormat oI the Iorebrain requires conversion to a serial, limited capacity Iormat to serve behavior.
4.5.3. The zona incerta and the seizures of absence epilepsy. It is to be noted, Iinally, that the PenIield and Jasper postulation oI a centrencephalic system svmmetricallv related to both cerebral hemispheres was motivated in part by observations on the generalized seizures oI absence epilepsy. The :ona incerta sends a rich complement oI commissural Iibers across the midline not only to itselI, but to the association nuclei oI the dorsal thalamus (Power & MitroIanis 1999, 2001). It is also a prime locus Ior the induction oI generalized epileptic seizures, being more sensitive than any other brain site to their induction by local inIusion oI carbachol (Brudzynski et al. 1995; see also Gioanni et al. 1991; Hamani et al. 1994). A number oI phenomena that may accompany absence seizures can be readily related to the :ona incerta. Thus a Iorward bending or dropping oI the head (or bending oI the whole body to the ground; PenIield & Jasper, 1954, p. 28) may relate to the already mentioned Iact that the transition between the zona incerta and midbrain contains mechanisms Ior vertical control oI eyes and head (Holstege & Cowie 1989; Waitzman et al. 2000; cI. Section 4.2, above). The Iluttering oI the eyelids that oIten occurs in the same situation is also easily accomodated by the Iunctional anatomy oI this region (Schmidtke & Buttner-Ennever 1992; Morcuende et al. 2002).
The PenIield and Jasper deIinition oI their proposed centrencephalic system always included explicit reIerence to the midbrain reticular Iormation. The :ona incerta resembles a Iorward extension oI the midbrain reticular Iormation beneath the thalamus (Ramon-Moliner & Nauta 1966), and much oI the Iunctional anatomy oI the diencephalon needs to be re-examined in light oI its unusual connectivity. As noted by Bartho et al. (2002), the identiIication oI a second, incertal, source oI GABAergic innervation oI the dorsal thalamus in addition to that oI the thalamic reticular nucleus necessitates a re-evaluation oI the entire issue oI the nature oI thalamic involvement in seizure generation and oscillatory thalamocortical activity (McCormick & Contreras 2001; Steriade 2001). This is all the more so since the even more recent discovery oI a third source oI powerIul GABAergic thalamic inhibition, originating in the anterior pretectal nucleus (Bokor et al. 2005). One need not, however, await the outcome oI such re-examination to identiIy the :ona incerta as the perIect anatomical center-piece Ior the PenIield and Jasper centrencephalic hypothesis, though its obscurity at the time kept it Irom being recognized as 28 such.
5. Consciousness in children born without cortex.
Anencephaly is the medical term Ior a condition in which the cerebral hemispheres either Iail to develop Ior genetic-developmental reasons or are massively compromized by trauma oI a physical, vascular, toxic, hypoxic-ischemic or inIectious nature at some stage oI their development. Strictly speaking the term is a misnomer. The brain consists oI Iar more than cerebral hemispheres or prosencephalon, yet various conditions oI radical hemispheric damage are historically labelled anencephaly. When the condition is acquired, e.g. by an intrauterine vascular accident (stroke) oI the Ietal brain, the damaged Iorebrain tissue may undergo wholesale resorption. It is replaced by cerebrospinal Iluid Iilling otherwise empty meninges lining a normally shaped skull, as illustrated in Fig. 8. The condition is then called hydranencephaly (Friede 1989), and is unrelated to the Iar more benign condition called hydrocephalus, in which cortical tissue is compressed by enlarging ventricles but is present in anatomically distorted Iorm (Sutton et al. 1980).
Figure 8. Saggittal and Irontal magnetic resonance images oI the head oI a child with hydranencephaly. Spared ventromedial occipital and some midline cortical matter overlies an intact cerebellum and brainstem, while the rest oI the cranium is Iilled with cerebrospinal Iluid. Reprinted with the kind permission oI the American College oI Radiology (ACR Learning File, Neuroradiology, Edition 2, 2004).
The loss oI cortex must be massive to be designated hydranencephaly, but it is seldom complete (see Fig. 8). It typically corresponds to the vast but somewhat variable Iorebrain expanse supplied by the anterior cerebral circulation (Myers 1989; Wintour et al. 1996). Variable remnants oI cortex supplied by the posterior circulation, notably inIeromedial occipital, but also basal 29 portions oI temporal cortex, and midline cortical tissue along the Ialx extending into medial Irontal cortex, may be spared. The physical presence oI such cortical tissue, clearly visible in Fig. 8, need not mean, however, that it is connected to the thalamus (white matter loss oIten interrupts the visual radiations, Ior instance) or that it is even locally Iunctional. On autopsy such tissue may be Iound to be gliotic on microscopic examination or to exhibit other structural anomalies indicating loss oI Iunction (Takada et al. 1989; Marin-Padilla 1997). As Fig 8 shows, most cortical areas are simply missing in hydranencephaly, and with them the organized system oI corticocortical connections that underlie the integrative activity oI cortex and its proposed role in Iunctions such as consciousness (Sporns et al. 2000; Baars et al. 2003).
An inIant born with hydranencephaly may initially present no conspicuous symptoms (Andre et al. 1975), and occasionally the condition is not diagnosed until several months postnatally, when developmental milestones are missed. In the course oI the Iirst year oI liIe, which is oIten though not invariably diIIicult, these inIants typically develop a variety oI complications which always include motoric ones (tonus, spasticity, cerebral palsy), and oIten include seizures, problems with temperature regulation, reIlux/aspiration with pulmonary sequelae and other health problems occasioning medical emergencies and attended by a high mortality rate. Were one to conIine one`s assessment oI the capacities oI children with hydranencephaly to their presentation at this time which Ior natural reasons is the period in the lives oI these children to which the medical proIession has the most exposure it would be all too easy to paint a dismal picture oI incapacity and unresponsiveness as the hydranencephaly norm. When, however, the health problems are brought under control by medication and other suitable interventions such as shunting to relieve intracranial pressure, the child tends to stabilize and with proper care and stimulation can survive Ior years and even decades (HoIIman & Liss 1969; McAbee et al. 2000; Covington et al. 2003; Counter 2005).
When examined aIter such stabilization has taken place, and in the setting oI the home environment upon which these medically Iragile children are crucially dependent, they give prooI oI being not only awake, but oI the kind oI responsiveness to their surroundings that qualiIies as conscious by the criteria oI ordinary neurological examination (Shewmon et al. 1999). The report by Shewmon and colleagues is the only published account based upon an assessment oI the capacities oI children with hydranencephaly under near optimal conditions, and the authors Iound that each oI the Iour children they assessed was conscious. For detail, the reader is reIerred to the case reports included in the Shewmon et al. publication. Anecdotal reports by medical proIessionals to the same eIIect occasionally see print (Counter, 2005), but compared to its theoretical and medical importance the issue remains woeIully underexplored.
To supplement the limited inIormation available in the medical literature on the behavior oI children with hydranencephaly, the present author joined a worldwide internet selI-help group Iormed by parents and primary caregivers oI such children in February oI 2003. Since then he has read more than 26,000 e-mail messages passing between group members. OI these he has saved some 1,200 messages containing inIormative observations or revealing incidents involving the children. In October 2004 he joined Iive oI these Iamilies Ior one week as part oI a social get- together Ieaturing extended visits to DisneyWorld with the children, who ranged in age Irom 10 months to 5 years. The author Iollowed and observed their behavior in the course oI the many private and public events oI that week, and documented it with Iour hours oI video recordings.
The author`s impression Irom this Iirst-hand exposure to children with hydranencephaly roundly 30 conIirms the account given by Shewmon and colleagues. These children are not only awake and oIten alert, but show responsiveness to their surroundings in the Iorm oI emotional or orienting reactions to environmental events (see Fig. 9 Ior an illustration), most readily to sounds but also to salient visual stimuli (optic nerve status varies widely in hydranencephaly, see below). They express pleasure by smiling and laughter, and aversion by 'Iussing, arching oI the back and crying (in many gradations), their Iaces being animated by these emotional states. A Iamiliar adult can employ this responsiveness to build up play sequences predictably progressing Irom smiling, over giggling to laughter and great excitement on the part oI the child. The children respond diIIerentially to the voice and initiatives oI Iamiliars, and show preIerences Ior certain situations and stimuli over others, such as a speciIic Iamiliar toy, tune or video program, and apparently can even come to expect their regular presence in the course oI recurrent daily routines.
Figure 9. The reaction oI a three year old girl with hydranencephaly in a social situation in which her baby brother has been placed in her arms by her parents, who Iace her attentively and help support the baby while photographing.
Though behavior varies Irom child to child and over time in all these respect, some oI these children may even take behavioral initiatives within the severe limitations oI their motor disabilities, in the Iorm oI instrumental behaviors such as making noise by kicking trinkets hanging in a special Irame constructed Ior the purpose ('little room), or activating Iavorite toys by switches, presumably based upon associative learning oI the connection between actions and their eIIects. Such behaviors are accompanied by situationally appropriate signs oI pleasure or excitement on the part oI the child, indicating that they involve the kind oI coherent interaction between environmental stimuli, motivational-emotional mechanisms, and bodily actions Ior which the mesodiencephalic system outlined in this article is proposed to have evolved. The children are, moreover, subject to the seizures oI absence epilepsy. Parents recognize these lapses oI accessibility in their children, commenting on them in terms such as 'she is oII talking with the angels, and they have no trouble recognizing when their child 'is back. As discussed earlier, episodes oI absence in this Iorm oI epilepsy represent a basic aIIliction oI consciousness (cI. BlumenIeld & Taylor 2003). The Iact that these children exhibit such episodes would seem to 31 be a weighty piece oI evidence regarding their conscious status.
In view oI the Iunctional considerations reviewed in the Ioregoing, none oI these behavioral maniIestations in children with hydranencephaly ought to occasion any surprise, and no special explanations such as neural reorganization based on plasticity are needed to account Ior them. Rather, they are what the nodal position oI mesodiencephalic mechanisms in convergent neural integration, along with the comparative evidence regarding the behavior oI mammals in the absence oI cerebral cortex, lead us to expect. Nor is there much warrant Ior attempting to attribute these behaviors to remnant cortical tissue. Besides the questionable Iunctional status oI spared cortex already alluded to, a signiIicant Iunctional asymmetry speaks directly against it. As common as it is Ior some occipital cortex to remain in these individuals, as rare is it Ior any auditory cortex to be spared. Yet sensory responsiveness in hydranencephaly shows the opposite asymmetry: hearing is generally preserved while vision tends to be compromised (Hydranencephaly group survey 2003). The pattern is easily accounted Ior by the intactness oI the brainstem auditory system in these children (Lott et al. 1986; Yuge & Kaga 1998), crowned by a projection Irom inIerior to superior colliculus. By contrast, vision in these children is liable to be compromised already at the level oI the optic nerve. The latter`s blood supply through the anterior cerebral circulation exposes it to damage in hydranencephaly, and its status varies widely in aIIected children (Jones & France 1978).
What is surprising, instead, is the routine classiIication oI children with hydranencephaly into the diagnostic category oI 'vegetative state (Multi-Society Task Force 1994), apparently in conIormity with a theoretical identiIication between the cortex as an anatomical entity and consciousness as a Iunction. It is this very identiIication which has been under critical examination in the present target article. To the extent to which the arguments and the evidence presented here have any merit such an identiIication is not tenable, and the routine attribution oI a lack oI awareness to children lacking cortex Irom birth would accordingly be inadmissible. The extent oI awareness and other capacities in these children must be based on assessment in its own right, by appropriate neurological tests, and not by reIerence to the status oI their cortical tissue (Shewmon 2004). Moreover, considering the medically Iragile status oI many oI these children, such behavioral assessment must be perIormed under optimal circumstances.
Properly assessed, the behavior oI children with early loss oI their hemispheres opens a unique window on the Iunctional capacities oI a human brainstem deprived oI its cerebral cortex early in intrauterine development. They tell us, Ior one thing, that the human brainstem is speciIically human: these children smile and laugh in the speciIically human manner, which is diIIerent Irom that oI our closest relatives among the apes (van HooII 1972; Provine & Yong 1991). This means that the human brainstem incorporates mechanisms implementing speciIically human capacities, as shown long ago by the neurologist Gamper on the basis oI his detailed cinematographically documented account oI a congenitally anencephalic girl entrusted to his care (Gamper, 1926). In her case there is no possibility that remnant hemispheric tissue might account Ior her human smile, since detailed post-mortem histology disclosed that she had no neural tissue above the level oI the thalamus, and even her thalamus was not Iunctional.
The implication oI the present account is that unless there are Iurther complications such a child should be expected to be conscious, i.e. possessed oI the primary consciousness by which environmental sensory inIormation is related to bodily action (such as orienting) and motivation/emotion through the brainstem system outlined in the Ioregoing. The basic Ieatures oI 32 that system evolved long beIore the cerebral hemispheres embarked on their spectacular expansion in mammals to supply it with a new Iorm oI inIormation based upon cumulative integration oI individual experience across the liIetime (Ior which see Merker, 2004a). Now as then this brainstem system perIorms Ior cortex, as Ior the rest oI the brain, its basic Iunction oI integrating the varied and widely distributed inIormation needed to make the best choice oI the very next act. That Iunction, according to the present account, is the essential reason Ior our being conscious in the Iirst place. The integrated and coherent relationship it establishes between environmental events, motivation/emotion, and actions around the pivotal node oI an egocenter would seem to oIIer a deIinition oI a 'being in biological terms.
6. Implications for medical ethics
Needless to say, the present account has ramiIying implications Ior issues in medical ethics. One oI these concerns pain management in children with hydranencephaly and similar conditions. It is not uncommon Ior parents to encounter surprise on the part oI medical proIessionals when requesting analgesia or anesthesia Ior their crying child during invasive procedures, a situation in some ways reminiscent oI what obtained in the case oI neonates only a Iew decades back (Anand & Hickey 1987). They also extend to more general issues pertaining to the quality oI care appropriate to these children, and ultimately to questions such as the meaning oI personhood and even medical deIinitions oI death (see, e.g., Shewmon et al. 1989, and reIerences therein). Such questions are decidedly beyond the scope oI the present paper, which is meant only to raise those issues oI a theoretical and empirical nature which are prior to and essential Ior Iinding reasoned and responsible answers to the ethical ones. SuIIice it to say that the evidence surveyed here gives no support Ior basing a search Ior such answers on the assumption that 'awareness in the primary sense oI coherent relatedness oI a motivated being to his or her surroundings is an exclusively cortical Iunction and cannot exist without it.
7. Conclusion
The evidence and Iunctional arguments reviewed in this article are not easily reconciled with an exclusive identiIication oI the cerebral cortex as the medium oI conscious Iunction. They even suggest that the primary Iunction oI consciousness that oI matching opportunities with needs in a central motion-stabilized body-world interIace organized around an ego-center vastly antedates the invention oI neocortex by mammals and may in Iact have an implementation in the upper brainstem without it. The tacit consensus concerning the cerebral cortex as the 'organ oI consciousness would thus have been reached prematurely, and may in Iact be seriously in error. This has not always been so, as indicated by the review oI the PenIield and Jasper 'centrencephalic theory oI consciousness and volitional behavior with which we began. As we have seen, their proposal has not only been strengthened by certain Iindings accumulating since it was Iirst Iormulated more than halI a century ago. Suitably updated it still appears capable oI providing a general Iramework Ior the integration oI a vast array oI diverse Iacts spanning Irom the basics oI the vertebrate brain plan to evidence Ior awareness in children born without a cortex. Whether the perspective presented here can be developed into a comprehensive account oI the neural organization oI consciousness will require much additional work oI a theoretical and empirical nature to determine. The testable prediction made in Section 4.5.1 above should smooth the path to such a Iuture verdict.
33
NOTES
1. In what Iollows the term 'cortex will always be taken to mean all or part oI the cerebral cortex along with its associated dorsal thalamic and claustral nuclear apparatus. The thalamic reticular nucleus, being Iunctionally intrinsic to this thalamocortical complex is regarded as being part oI it despite its embryological and phylogenetic origin in the ventral thalamus (it is directly continuous with the lateral margin oI the zona incerta). Unless otherwise indicated,subcortical will reIer to all central nervous system tissue that is not thalamocortical complex in the above sense, and 'brainstem to diencephalon and the rest oI the entire neuraxis caudal to it.
2. To avoid possible misunderstanding oI this key point, note that the analog 'reality simulation proposed here has nothing to do with a Iacility Ior simulating, say, alternate courses oI action by, say, letting them unIold 'in imagination, or any other version oI an 'inner world, 'subjective thought, 'Iantasy, or the like. Such capacities are derivative ones, dependent upon additional neural structures whose operations presuppose those described here. The purpose oI the 'analog simulation is Iirst and Ioremost to veridically reIlect states oI the world, the body and needs at whatever level oI sophistication a given species implements those realities. It is thus most directly related to the model oI Philipona and colleagues (2003, 2004), as well as to the 'situation room analogy developed by Lehar (2002).
3. Note that in some oI the animal and human studies cited in this passage the term 'Cartesian occurs as a misnomer Ior 'spherical. They all reIer to a system organized in terms oI 'azimuth and 'elevation, i.e. a system oI spherical coordinates.
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