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Lecture

Charlotte Martial, "Can science explain consciousness? Lessons from coma and related states"


7 Mar 2017, 6:00pm - 7:30pm

LG01, Professor Stuart Hall Building

Event overview

Cost Free
Department Psychology ,
Website Anomalistic Psychology Research Unit Invited Speaker Series
Contact G.Wright(@gold.ac.uk)
0207 919 7919

Anomalistic Psychology Research Unit Invited Speaker Series 2016/17

Abstract:
Understanding consciousness remains one of the greatest mysteries for science to solve. How do our brains work? How can we know if some patients in coma have any consciousness left and how could we communicate with them? What are near-death experiences? What is brain death? What happens in our brains during dreaming, hypnosis or meditation? At present, nobody understands how matter (our trillions of neural connections) becomes perception and thought.

We will here briefly review some neurological facts on consciousness and impaired consciousness. Thanks to recent advances in (neuroimaging) technology, the mapping of conscious perception and cognition in health (e.g., conscious waking, sleep, dreaming, hypnosis, meditation, sleepwalking and anesthesia) and in disease (e.g., coma, near-death, “vegetative” state, seizures, hallucinations etc) is providing exciting new insights into the functional neuroanatomy of human consciousness. Our perception of the outside world (sensory awareness; what we see, hear, etc.) and our awareness of an inner world (self-awareness; the little "voice" inside that "speaks" to ourselves) seemingly depend on two separate networks we could recently identify. Philosophers might argue that the subjective aspect of the mind will never be sufficiently accounted for by the objective methods of reductionistic science. We here prefer a more pragmatic approach and remain naively optimistic that technological advances might ultimately lead to an understanding of the neural substrate of human consciousness.

Bio:

Charlotte Martial, neuropsychologist, is part of the Coma Science Group at the GIGA Research and Neurology Department of the University and University Hospital of Liège, Belgium. Charlotte Martial, PhD student, is currently a research fellow at the Belgian National Funds for Scientific Research (FNRS) in Biomedical Sciences. She is investigating the characterization and the neural correlates of “Near-Death Experiences” and their memories. Her other interests reside in investigating the neural correlates of altered and modified states of consciousness (mainly using MRI and EEG neuroimaging techniques). Next to her neuroscientific interest, she is also involved in the clinical management of patients suffering from disorders of consciousness.

Anomalistic Psychology Research Unit Invited Speaker Series

Dates & times

Date Time Add to calendar
7 Mar 2017 6:00pm - 7:30pm
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