HYBRID EVENT: You can participate in person at Orlando, Florida, USA or Virtually from your home or work.

12th Edition of International Conference on Neurology and Brain Disorders

October 20-22, 2025

October 20 -22, 2025 | Orlando, Florida, USA
INBC 2025

Towards solving the hard problem of consciousness: The varieties of brain resonances and the conscious experiences that they support

Speaker at Neuroscience Conference - Stephen Grossberg
Boston University, United States
Title : Towards solving the hard problem of consciousness: The varieties of brain resonances and the conscious experiences that they support

Abstract:

The hard problem of consciousness is the problem of explaining how we experience qualia or phenomenal experiences, such as seeing, hearing, and feeling, and knowing what they are. To solve this problem, a theory of consciousness needs to link brain to mind by modeling how emergent properties of several brain mechanisms interacting together embody detailed properties of individual conscious psychological experiences. This article summarizes evidence that Adaptive Resonance Theory, or ART, accomplishes this goal. ART is a cognitive and neural theory of how advanced brains autonomously learn to attend, recognize, and predict objects and events in a changing world. ART has predicted that “all conscious states are resonant states” as part of its specification of mechanistic links between processes of consciousness, learning, expectation, attention, resonance, and synchrony. It hereby provides functional and mechanistic explanations of data ranging from individual spikes and their synchronization to the dynamics of conscious perceptual, cognitive, and cognitive–emotional experiences. ART has reached sufficient maturity to begin classifying the brain resonances that support conscious experiences of seeing, hearing, feeling, and knowing. Psychological and neurobiological data in both normal individuals and clinical patients are clarified by this classification. This analysis also explains why not all resonances become conscious, and why not all brain dynamics are resonant. The global organization of the brain into computationally complementary cortical processing streams (complementary computing), and the organization of the cerebral cortex into characteristic layers of cells (laminar computing), figure prominently in these explanations of conscious and unconscious processes.

Biography:

Stephen Grossberg is a principal founder and current research leader in computational neuroscience, theoretical cognitive science, and brain-­‐inspired technology. He introduced the paradigm and equations for learning and memory that are used today. His work focuses upon how individuals adapt autonomously in real time to unexpected environmental challenges. Google Scholar reports more than 70,000 citations of his over 550 publications. He has received numerous awards and honors from around the world, most recently the 2015 Norman Anderson Lifetime Achievement Award of the Society of Experimental Psychologists (SEP), and the 2017 Frank Rosenblatt award of the Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).

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