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Subject: Tucson Conference Information
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Toward A Scientific Basis for Consciousness
An Interdisciplinary Conference
Representatives from psychology, neuroscience, computer science, physics,
mathematics, medicine, philosophy, and other fields are invited to an
international, interdisciplinary scientific conference on consciousness.
The University of Arizona
Tucson, Arizona
April 12-17, 1994
=====================================
Toward A Scientific Basis for Consciousness
Consciousness
What is consciousness? Ignored, denied, and mystified in the past,
consciousness is now recognized as one of the greatest scientific frontiers
facing humanity. It is being approached across a spectrum ranging from
reductionism (the mind is the brain) to dualism (the mind is distinct and
merely interacts with the brain). Between these extremes lie ample evidence,
theory, and tools to begin to unravel the mind/brain "problem."
Representatives from psychology, neuroscience, computer science, physics,
mathematics, medicine, philosophy, and other fields will gather to discuss
these issues at an international, interdisciplinary scientific conference on
consciousness.
Communication across disciplinary lines isn't always easy; each field has
jargon and biases that get in the way. We hope to promote understanding
through an atmosphere of open discussion and festive challenge. While
focusing on objective scientific approaches to consciousness, we also recognize
the importance of subjective experiences and hope to provide avenues for
discussing them. Join us in finding a common synergy among different fields,
and help us move toward a new understanding of what "consciousness" really
means.
Details
When: The conference begins Tuesday, April 12 with a welcoming reception
starting at 6:30 p.m. Sessions continue through Sunday afternoon, April 17.
Where: Duvall Auditorium in The University of Arizona Health Sciences
Center.
Cost: $220.00 per person; a special student rate of $75.00 is also available.
Parking: Parking is available at the conference parking lot just south of the
Arizona Health Sciences Center. Parking permits cost $6 for the entire
conference, and will be available at the registration table.
7For further information contact: Jim Laukes, Program Coordinator, The
University of Arizona Extended University, 1955 East Sixth Street, Tucson,
Arizona 85719; phone (602) 624-UofA, ext. 253; fax (602) 621-3269; e-mail,
jlaukes(a)ccit.arizona.edu.
Organizers
Stuart Hameroff, M.D., Department of Anesthesiology, The University of
Arizona
Alfred Kaszniak, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, The University of
Arizona
Alwyn Scott, Ph.D., Department of Mathermatics, The University of Arizona
Gordon Olson, M.D., Internal Medicine, Sierra Vista, Arizona
Jim Laukes, M.A., Extended University, The University of Arizona
~~~~~~~SCHEDULE OF EVENTS~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Duval Auditorium
The University of Arizona Health Sciences Center
_________________________________________________________________
TUESDAY, APRIL 12
6:30-8:30 PM Reception at Arizona Inn
__________________________________________________________________
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13
8:00-8:30 AM Continental Breakfast
PHILOSOPHY OF MIND
8:30-9:15 AM--
Owen Flanagan, PhD, Department of Philosophy, Duke University
"Constructive naturalism and consciousness: philosophic perspectives"
9:15-9:45 AM--
Alvin Goldman, PhD, Department of Philosophy, University of Arizona
"Philosophy of mind: defining consciousness"
9:45-10:15 AM--
David Chalmers, PhD, Department of Philosophy, Washington University, St.
Louis, Missouri
"On explaining consciousness scientifically: choices and challenges"
10:15-10:45 AM Break
COGNITIVE APPROACHES
10:45-11:30 AM--
Bernard Baars, PhD, Wright Institute, Berkeley, California
"Cognitive theory of consciousness"
11:30-12:00 PM--
John Kihlstrom, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Arizona
"The unconscious in social interaction"
12:00-12:30 PM--
David Galin, MD, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San
Francisco
"The structure of subjective experience"
12:30-2:00 PM Lunch on Your Own
PERSPECTIVES FROM PATHOLOGY I
2:00-2:45 PM--
Petra Stoerig, PhD, Institute of Medical Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians
University of Munich, Munich, Germany
"Blindsight and human consciousness"
2:45-3:15 PM--
LR Talbot, PhD, HA Whitaker, PhD, Centre de Recherche du Centre
Hospitalier Cte-des-Neiges, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
"Brain injured persons in an altered state of consciousness: measures and
intervention strategies"
3:15-3:45 PM--
James Whinnery, PhD, MD, Chief Aeromedical Scientist, Naval Air Warfare
Center, Warminster, Pennsylvania
"Induction of consciousness in the ischemic brain"
3:45-4:15 PM Break
PERSPECTIVES FROM PATHOLOGY II
4:15-5:00 PM--
Alfred Kaszniak, PhD, Departments of Psychology, Neurology and Psychiatry,
University of Arizona
"Self-awareness in patients with Alzheimer's disease"
5:00-5:30 PM--
Victor Mark, MD, Department of Neuroscience, University of North Dakota,
North Dakota
"Diagnostic communicative behavior in a splitbrain subject"
5:30-6:00 PM--
Polly Henninger, PhD, California Institute of Technology
"Out of left-hemisphere awareness: what the commissurotomy subjects show
us about consciousness"
POSTER SESSION I
6:30-9:00 PM--
Poster Session I & Dinner Buffet
Poster Presenters with Last Names A-N
Plaza Hotel Conference Center
(Poster Titles/Authors Follow Speaker List)
__________________________________________________________________
THURSDAY, APRIL 14
8:00-8:30 AM Continental Breakfast
NEUROBIOLOGY OF CONSCIOUSNESS
8:30-9:15 AM--
Christof Koch, PhD, Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology
"Towards a neurobiological theory of consciousness"
9:15-9:45 AM--
Bruce McNaughton, PhD, Matthew Wilson, PhD, Department of Psychology,
University of Arizona
"Ensemble neural codes for spatial experience, and their reactivation during
sleep"
9:45-10:15 AM--
Valerie Gray Hardcastle, Department of Philosophy, Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University, Virginia
"The binding problem and neurophysiological oscillations"
10:15-10:45 Break
EXPERIMENTAL FACTORS IN CONSCIOUSNESS
10:45-11:30 AM--
Benjamin Libet, PhD, Department of Physioloy, University of California, San
Francisco
"Neural time factor in conscious and unconscious functions"
11:30-12:00 PM--
Gary Schwartz, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Arizona
"Olfaction, consciousness and the brain"
12:00-12:30 PM--
Peter L nsky, Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech
Republic, Prague
Jean-Pierre Rospars, Dpartement de Zoologie and Laboratoire de Biomtrie,
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Versailles Cedex, France
"Stochastic model of odor intensity coding"
12:30-2:00 PM Lunch on Your Own
SUB-NEURAL MECHANISMS OF CONSCIOUSNESS I
2:00-2:45 PM--
Karl Pribram, MD, Brain Research Center, Radford University, Radford,
Virginia
"Dendritic microprocessing and consciousness"
2:45-3:15 PM--
Stuart Hameroff, MD, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Arizona
"Anesthesia, protein conformational dynamics and consciousness"
3:15-3:45 PM--
Djuro Koruga, PhD, Faculty of Engineering, University of Belgrade,
Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia
"Information physics, neuromolecular computing and consciousness"
3:45:4:15 PM Break
SUB-NEURAL MECHANISMS OF CONSCIOUSNESS II
4:15-5:00 PM--
Michael Conrad, PhD, Department of Computer Science, Wayne State
University, Detroit, Michigan
"Biomolecular quantum computing and consciousness"
5:00-5:30 PM--
John Watterson, PhD, Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science, Griffith
University Gold Coast, Australia
"Pixels of consciousness: organized clusters at protein-water interface"
5:30-6:00 PM--
Jack Tuszynski, PhD, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
"Microtubular self-organization and information processing capabilities"
6:30-9:00 PM Western BBQ
__________________________________________________________________
FRIDAY, APRIL 15
8:00-8:30 AM Continental Breakfast
QUANTUM THEORY AND CONSCIOUSNESS I
8:30-9:15 AM--
Roger Penrose, PhD, Mathematical Institute, Oxford University, UK
"Quantum coherence and consciousness"
9:15-9:45 AM--
Mari Jibu, MD, Kunio Yasue, PhD, Notre Dame Seishin University,
Okayama, Japan
"Quantum optical coherence in microtubules: implications for consciousness"
9:45-10:15 AM--
Walter Schempp, PhD, Department of Mathematics, University of Siegen,
Germany
"Quantum neural holography"
10:15-10:45 AM Break
Quantum Theory and Consciousness II
10:45-11:30 AM--
Danah Zonar, B. Sc., OxfordBrookes University, United Kingdom
"Consciousness and Bose-Einstein condensates"
11:30-12:00 PM--
Ezio Insinna, PhD, Schoeller Elektronik, Lyon, France
"Jungian synchronicity, non-locality and consciousness"
12:00-12:30 PM--
Fred Wolf, PhD, La Conner, Washington
"On the quantum mechanics of dreams and the arising of the self-concept"
12:30-2:00 PM Lunch on Your Own
POSTER SESSION II
6:30-9:00 PM--
Poster Session II & Dinner Buffet
Poster Presenters with Last Names O-Z
Arizona Inn
(Poster Titles/Authors Follow Speaker List)
__________________________________________________________________
SATURDAY, APRIL 16
8:00-8:30 AM Continental Breakfast
EMERGENT PHENOMENA
8:30-9:15 AM--
Chris Barrett, PhD, Los Alamos National Laboratories, Los Alamos, New
Mexico
"Functionalism, emergence, and mental processes"
9:15-9:45 AM--
Steen Rasmussen, PhD, Los Alamos National Laboratories, Santa F Institute
"Self-organization and consciousness"
9:45-10:15 AM--
Alan Newell, PhD, Department of Mathematics, University of Arizona
"Patterns in optics: a paradigm"
10:15-10:45 AM Break
HIERARCHICAL ORGANIZATION
10:45-11:30 AM--
Eric Harth, PhD, Department of Physics, Syracuse University, New York
"The creative loop: how the brain makes a mind"
11:30-12:00 PM--
Nils Baas, PhD, Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of
Trondheim, Norway
"Higher order cognitive processes"
12:00-12:30 PM--
Alwyn Scott, PhD, Department of Mathematics, University of Arizona
"Hierarchical organization in the brain~emergence of consciousness"
12:30-2:00 PM Lunch on Your Own
NEURAL NETWORKS
2:00-2:45 PM--
John Taylor, PhD, Centre for Neural Networks, Department of Mathematics,
King~s College, London, United Kingdom
"Toward a neural network model of the mind"
2:45-3:15 PM--
Judith Dayhoff, PhD, Systems Research Center, University of Maryland
"Artificial neural networks: biological plausibility"
3:15-3:45 PM--
Andrew Wuensche, School of Cognitive and Computer Science, University of
Sussex, UK & Santa Fe Institute
"The ghost in the machine"
3:45-4:15 PM Break
PHENOMENOLOGY
4:15-5:00 PM--
Andrew Weil, MD, Division of Social Perspective, College of Medicine,
University of Arizona
"Pharmacology of consciousness"
5:00-5:30 PM--
Dharma Singh Khalsa, MD, Department of Anesthesiology, Maricopa Medical
Center
"Eastern philosophy, meditation and consciousness"
5:30-6:00 PM--
Brian Josephson, PhD, Department of Physics, University of Cambridge,
United Kingdom
"What music can tell us about the fundamental nature of mind"
6:30-9:30 PM Western BBQ Dinner
__________________________________________________________________
SUNDAY, APRIL 17
8:00-8:30 AM Continental Breakfast
OVERVIEW
8:30-9:15 AM--
Walter Freeman, PhD, Neurobiology, University of California, Berkeley
"Some category confusions in studies of the biology of consciousness"
9:15-9:45 AM--
I. N. Marshall, M.A., M.B.B.S., Oxford Brookes University, United
Kingdom
"Three kinds of thinking"
9:45-10:15 AM--
Arthur Winfree, PhD, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of
Arizona
"Is it impossible to `measure~ consciousness?"
10:15-10:45 AM Break
10:45-11:15 AM--
Willis W. Harman, PhD, Institute of Noetic Sciences, Sausalito, California
"A comparison of three approaches to reconciling science and consciousness"
11:15-12:30 PM Wrap-up Discussion
__________________________________________________________________
Toward a Scientific Basis for Consciousness
An Interdisciplinary Conference
April 12-17, 1994
Poster Presentations
As of 3/8/94
__________________________________________________________________
Richard Amoroso, Director of the Noetic Institute, Orinda, California
"Consciousness: A radical definition"
Britt Anderson, MD, Thomas Head, MD, Department of Neurology and the
Alzheimer's Disease Center, University of Alabama at Birmingham,
Birmingham, Alabama
"Evidence for covert language comprehension in a severe `sensory' aphasic"
Richard P. Atkinson, PhD, Heath Earl, Weber State University
"Enhanced vigilance in guided meditation: Perceptual implications of altered
consciousness"
Parthasarathi Banerjee, PhD, National Institute of Science, Technology and
Development Studies, New Delhi, India
"The four spaces of consciousness"
John Barnden, PhD, Computing Research Laboratory and Computer Science
Department, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico
"Consciousness and folk-psychological metaphors of mind"
Mikael Bergenheim, PhD, Hkan Johansson, Brittmarie Granlund, Jonas
Pedersen, Division of Work Physiology, National Institute of Occupational
Health, Sweden; and the Department of Physiology, University of Ume,
Ume, Sweden
"Synchronization of sensory information to conscious experience"
John Boitano, PhD, Department of Psychology, Fairfield University, Fairfield,
Connecticut
"Edelman's biological theory of consciousness"
Greg Brack, PhD, Catherine Brack, PhD, Mary Kate Bagwell, MS, Georgia
State University
"Exploring the underlying mechanisms of dissociation as a modification of
consciousness"
Robert Alan Brown, Engineering Consultant, R.A. Brown Technologies,
Mettapoisett, Massachusetts
"Self-learning, memory-controlled machines: Nonliving beings"
Dwight Bulkley, PhD, Seattle Institute for the Life Sciences, Seattle,
Washington
"Electromagnetic micromechanisms: a necessary prelude to understanding
consciousness."
Jean Burns, PhD, San Leandro, California
"The possibility of empirical test of hypotheses about the relationship between
consciousness and the physical world"
Joseph P. Cammarota, Aerial Combat Maneuvering Enhancement Laboratory,
Naval Air Warfare Center, Aircraft Division, Warminster, Pennsylvania
"A dynamic model of the induction of unconsciousness due to acceleration
(+Gz) induced ischemia"
Allan Combs, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina
at Asheville
"Consciousness as a system near the edge of chaos"
Deborah Conrad, PhD, Department of Philosophy, Wayne State University,
Detroit, Michigan
"Consciousness and rule following"
Randall Cork, MD, PhD, Department of Anesthesiology, Louisiana State
University, New Orleans, Louisiana
"The effect of surgical sedation on implicit memory"
Thaddeus M. Cowan, PhD, Department of Psychology, Kansas State
University, Manhattan, Kansas
"Sensation, perception, and the theory of conscious extent"
Sheila Davis, The New School for Social Research, New York
"Cerebral function, Jungian typology and language style: Toward a new
theory"
Arthur J. Deikman, MD, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, University of
California San Francisco, San Francisco, California
"The role of intention and self as determinants of consciousness: a functional
approach to spiritual experience"
Vinod Deshmukh, MD, PhD, Department of Neurology, University of
Florida, Jacksonville, Florida
"The quiescent brain and consciousness"
Norman Don, PhD, Bruce McDonough, PhD, Departments of Psychiatry and
Human Factors & Behavioral Toxicology Laboratory, University of Illinois at
Chicago
"EEGs, event-related brain potentials, altered states of consciousness and psi"
Martin Dudziak, PhD, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond
"Quantum processes and dynamic networks in biological systems"
Avshalom C. Elitzur, Department of Chemical Physics, The Weizmann
Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel
"Can relativity shed a new light on consciousness?"
B. Raymond Fink, MD, Department of Anesthesiology, University of
Washington
"Hub-action theory of nervous systems and consciousness"
Gregg Franzwa, PhD, Department of Philosophy, Texas Christian University,
Fort Worth, Texas
"Descartes, Searle and Edelman: The organic paradigm"
Michael Gilinsky, PhD, Institute of Physiology, Siberian Branch of Russian
Academy of Medical Sciences, Novosibirsk
"Participation of consciousness and emotions in elaboration of cold adaptation
strategies"
George Graham, PhD, and G. Lynn Stephens, Department of Philosophy,
University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama
"Reflexive personal agnosia and the self"
Guven Guzeldere, Center for the Study of Language & Information, Stanford
University, Stanford, California
"Consciousness and the functional link hypothesis"
Scott Hagan, BS, Department of Physics, McGill University, Montral,
Qubec
"Coherent activity in microtubules and its implications for global brain
function"
John S. Hagelin, PhD, Maharishi International University, Fairfield, Iowa
"Is consciousness the unified field? A field theorist's perspective"
Keith Harary, PhD, Institute for Advanced Psychology
"A filmed pilot trial in extended perception"
Howard T. Herman, MD, John C. Kotelly, BS, Newtonville, Massachusetts
"A candidate architecture for characterizing consciousness"
Marco Iacoboni, Jan Rayman, Eran Zaidel, Department of Psychology,
University of California, Los Angeles, California
"Left brain says yes, right brain says no: normative duality in the split
brain"
Svetlana Jankovic, MD(1), Djuro Koruga, PhD(1,2), 1) AKADEMIA
NOVA-GMT, Division for Consciousness Research, Serbia, Yugoslavia; 2)
Advanced Biotechnology Laboratory, Department of Anesthesiology,
University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
"Biomedical approach to consciousness research"
S. Jeffers, J. Sloan, Department of Physics and Astronomy, York University,
Ontario, Canada
"Optical diffraction and interference phenomena as potential indicators of
anomalous phenomena"
Alexander Jourjine, PhD, Analog Intelligence DA, Winchester, Massachusetts
"Consciousness as modeling of environment"
Stanley Klein, PhD, School of Optometry, University of California Berkeley,
Berkeley, California
"The dual nature of consciousness"
Don Krieger, PhD, Department of Neurosurgery, University of Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
"40 Hz cortical oscillations: The tip of the iceberg"
George Kurian, PhD, Department of Psychology, Punjabi University, Patiala,
India
"Microgenesis of consciousness"
R Lahoz-Beltra, PhD(1), SR Hameroff, MD(2), J Dayhoff, PhD(3), 1)
Department of Applied Mathematics, Faculty of Biological Sciences,
Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain;
2) Advanced Biotechnology Laboratory, Department of Anesthesiology,
University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona; 3) Systems Research Center,
University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland
"Phase transitions in bound water and their role as cytoskeletal communication
interface and medium for information representation"
Dyan Louria, Departments of Physiology and Anesthesiology, University of
Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
"Computer simulation of anesthetic quantum effects in proteins"
Ljubomir J. Kljakic, AKADEMIA NOVA, Division for consciousness
research, Novi Beograd, Serbia
"The Pelasgian creation myth as a starting point of new scientific paradigm of
human consciousness?"
John Limber, Psychology Department, University of New Hampshire,
Durham, New Hampshire
"Traynes of Thought" in language and consciousness: past and present"
Paul Lovland, M.SC., Klofta, Norway
"Meaning, motivation, and disorder: Thermodynamic model and possible
experiment"
Rollin McCraty, MA(1), Mike Atkinson(1), and William A. Tiller, PhD(2), 1)
Institute of HeartMath, Boulder Creek, California; 2) Department of Materials
Science and Engineering, Stanford University, Standord, California
"Heart rate variability as an indicator of highly ordered states of
consciousness"
Neil Law Malcolm, The Rowland Institute for Science, Cambridge,
Massachusetts
"Awareness of colours"
Peter J. Marcer, DPhil, FBCS, CEng., Aikido Enterprises, United Kingdom
"The nanotechnology of consciousness"
Donald Mathis, Michael Mozer, Computer Science Department, University of
Colorado, Boulder, Colorado
"On the computational utility of consciousness"
Douglas Matzke, Texas Instruments, Dallas, Texas
"Consciousness: A new computational paradigm"
J. Hulse Neufeld, Department of Anesthesiology, VA Medical Center, San
Diego, California
"A rat model of chronic pain and hypercortisolism for the study of attention"
Se n ~ Nualli n, PhD, Dublin City University and National Research Council,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
"An integrated theory of consciousness and cognitive development"
C.M.H. Nunn, PhD, C.J.S. Clarke, B.H. Blott, Department of Psychiatry,
Royal South Hants Hospital, and I.N. Marshall, MA, MBBS, Southampton,
United Kingdom
"Collapse of a quantum field may affect brain function"
Ayub Ommaya, MD, FRCS, FACS, Neurological Surgery, Center for
Interdisciplinary Brain Research Foundation, and George Washington
University Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland
"Emotion as consciousness: A thermodynamic approach"
David C. Osmon and Yana Suchy, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin
"A neural network model of dissociative disorder"
Rose Paradis and Eric Dietrich, Program in Philosophy and Computers and
Systems Science, Binghamton University, Binghamton, New York
"Capturing cognitive phenomena in computational models"
Donald Perlis, Department of Computer Science and Institute for Advanced
Computer Studies, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland
"An error-theory of consciousness"
Willis Pitkin, Jr., PhD, Department of English, Utah State University, Logan,
Utah
"Discourse, dreams, and the dawn of modern consciousness"
Paavo Pylkkanen, Academy of Finland Researcher in Cognitive Science,
Department of Philosophy, University of Helsinki; and Research Fellow
Department of Physics, Birbeck College University of London, England
"Mind, consciousness and the quantum theory"
Miloje M. Rakocevic, Department of Chemistry, University of Nis, Nis,
Serbia, Yugoslavia
"Does universal consciousness exist?"
Dejan Rakovi~, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, University of Belgrade,
Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia
"Neural networks, brainwaves and ionic structures; biophysical model for
states of consciousness?"
Peter A. Raynolds, PhD, Gennie H. Raynolds, Management and
Organizational Behavior, Northern Arizona Univeristy, Flagstaff, Arizona
"The projective differential (PD) response phenomenon: New tool for