We do not notice many tasks that our brains perform, whereas we are
completely aware of others. But it is sometimes hard for neuroscientists
to determine when we are conscious of our actions. Now a group of
British researchers is betting that betting can be used to study
consciousness.



Navindra Persaud, Peter McLeod and Alan Cowey of the University of
Oxford <http://www.ox.ac.uk>   were interested in situations in which
people can show high levels of cognitive performance with no apparent
awareness. In one experiment, they studied a person known as GY, who,
because of damage to his visual cortex, report no vision in his right
eye. But GY has a strange ability known as blind sight: he can guess
with reasonable accuracy whether or not a symbol is shown to that eye,
even though he reports no awareness of seeing it. The question has
remained whether at some level he is conscious of his performance.

The researchers asked GY to make one of two wagers after each guess:
£1 or half that amount, if he guessed correctly, the sum was added to
his winnings. If he guessed incorrectly, the money was subtracted. In
other words, GY had a financial incentive to be conscious of when he
guessed correctly and bet high on those occasions.  But although GY
guessed correctly 70 percent of the time, he chooses a high wager only
about half of the time, almost at random.

The researchers point out that the dissociation between cognitive
performance and betting performance is surprising because, in a way, the
high and low wagers are a decision very much like GY saying
"yes" or "not" to seeing an object. They argue this
disconnects between GY's blind sight performance and his betting
success suggests that placing a bet is a special type of decision.
Successful gambling appears to require consciousness of one's
performance.

Persaud and his colleagues have already used this link to measure
awareness in healthy volunteers. "We hope to combine (the wager
test) with imaging and recording methods," he says. That may make it
possible to finally identify the elusive neural circuitry that encodes
consciousness.




Happy Learning,




Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com




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