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Consciousness and psychosis associated with schizophrenia

The role of Cornu Ammonis Region 3
  • Ralf-Peter Behrendt
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Abstract

Information encoded by the autoassociation network of CA3 situates landmarks and objects within an allocentric frame of space and time. Guiding locomotion across the spatial environment, and generally organizing behaviour that transcends space and time, the hippocampus creates phenomenal space and time themselves, thus laying the foundations for conscious awareness. It is argued that conscious experience describes the informational content of self-organizing activity patterns in CA3. Excessive pyramidal cell activity in CA3, due to deficient inhibition by GABAergic basket interneurons, leading to event memory formation unrestrained by entorhinal input may be a mechanism for the generation of hallucinations in schizophrenia.

Abstract

Information encoded by the autoassociation network of CA3 situates landmarks and objects within an allocentric frame of space and time. Guiding locomotion across the spatial environment, and generally organizing behaviour that transcends space and time, the hippocampus creates phenomenal space and time themselves, thus laying the foundations for conscious awareness. It is argued that conscious experience describes the informational content of self-organizing activity patterns in CA3. Excessive pyramidal cell activity in CA3, due to deficient inhibition by GABAergic basket interneurons, leading to event memory formation unrestrained by entorhinal input may be a mechanism for the generation of hallucinations in schizophrenia.

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. List of contributors ix
  4. Prologue xiii
  5. Poem xxv
  6. Section I. Neuronal mechanisms
  7. The slow cortical potential hypothesis on consciousness 3
  8. Distinct characteristics of conscious experience are met by large-scale neuronal synchronization 17
  9. Gamma oscillations and the cellular components of consciousness? 29
  10. Dopamine modulation of decision making processes 39
  11. Undercurrents of consciousness 53
  12. Disconnecting consciousness 65
  13. Consciousness and neural time travel 73
  14. Section II. Psychological processes
  15. Consciousness and the relation between implicit and explicit memory 83
  16. Two varieties of unconscious processes 91
  17. Operating characteristics and awareness 103
  18. Noise in the brain, decision-making, determinism, free will, and consciousness 113
  19. Social consciousness 121
  20. Consciousness and language 129
  21. Cognitive illusions 139
  22. Dreaming as a model system for consciousness research 149
  23. Lucid dreaming and the bimodality of consciousness 155
  24. Section III. Psychopathologies and therapies
  25. Why depression feels bad 169
  26. Dementia and the boundary between conscious and nonconscious awareness 179
  27. Consciousness as the spin-off and schizophrenia as the price of language 187
  28. Consciousness and psychosis associated with schizophrenia 201
  29. The visual unconscious 215
  30. Believing is hearing is believing 227
  31. Dreaming as a physiological psychosis 239
  32. Conscious awareness versus optimistic beliefs in recreational Ecstasy/MDMA users 249
  33. Conscious and unconscious placebo responses 259
  34. Section IV. Expanding boundaries
  35. The paradoxes of creativity 271
  36. Potential contributions of research on meditation to the neuroscience of consciousness 281
  37. Self-induced altered states of consciousness 289
  38. Beyond the boundaries of the brain 301
  39. Plants of the gods and shamanic journeys 309
  40. Index 325
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