ISSN 1671-3710
CN 11-4766/R
主办:中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理科学进展 ›› 2023, Vol. 31 ›› Issue (7): 1172-1185.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1042.2023.01172

• 研究前沿 • 上一篇    下一篇

意识的层级性和丰富性:解读意识的两条路径

曹晋菁, 仇式明, 定险峰, 程晓荣(), 范炤()   

  1. 青少年网络心理与行为教育部重点实验室(华中师范大学); 人的发展与心理健康湖北省重点实验室; 华中师范大学心理学院, 武汉 430079
  • 收稿日期:2022-08-02 出版日期:2023-07-15 发布日期:2023-04-23
  • 通讯作者: 程晓荣,范炤 E-mail:x.cheng@ccnu.edu.cn;z.fan@ccnu.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:
    国家社会科学基金教育学一般课题“儿童‘体力/认知权衡’能力:心理加工机制及其干预研究”(BBA210036)

The gradedness and richness of consciousness: Two pathways toward decoding consciousness

CAO Jinjing, QIU Shiming, DING Xianfeng, CHENG Xiaorong(), FAN Zhao()   

  1. Key Laboratory of Adolescent Cyberpsychology and Behavior (CCNU), Ministry of Education; Key Laboratory of Human Development and Mental Health of Hubei Province; School of Psychology, Central China Normal University (CCNU), Wuhan 430079, China
  • Received:2022-08-02 Online:2023-07-15 Published:2023-04-23
  • Contact: CHENG Xiaorong, FAN Zhao E-mail:x.cheng@ccnu.edu.cn;z.fan@ccnu.edu.cn

摘要:

意识的层级性指意识加工模式究竟是遵循“全或无”还是“渐变”机制; 意识的丰富性指意识的表征内容究竟是“丰富的”还是“贫乏的”。层级性和丰富性分别从加工质量和加工范围两个角度对意识体验加以探索。它们是解读意识这一人类基本科学问题的两条重要路径——任何有关意识形成机制的理论, 都必须对这两个问题做出全面、准确、合理的解释。全面梳理和分析这两个问题的最新研究进展, 有助于厘清相关研究问题中不同观点的争论, 并能够揭示出两个问题之间的内在关联, 即二者都涉及意识的形成是否必须依赖认知取用的争论。未来相关研究可以通过改进实验范式及方法, 积极探索新的理论假说, 为不同情景中意识层级性和丰富性的复杂性表现提供统合解释。

关键词: 意识, 层级性, 丰富性, 认知神经机制, 意识形成机制理论

Abstract:

The gradedness of consciousness refers to whether conscious processing follows an “all-or-none” or “gradual” mode. The richness of consciousness refers to whether conscious representations are “rich” or “sparse”. Any subjective experience of consciousness could be explored from these two perspectives: gradedness represents the quality of consciousness, that is the clarity and stability of conscious content; while richness represents the scope of consciousness, that is the abundance and complexity of conscious content. The gradedness and richness of consciousness are intrinsically connected, and both can be traced back to the long-standing debate on whether cognitive access is necessary for the formation of consciousness. Therefore, they represent two important pathways toward decoding one of the basic scientific inquiries of mankind, i.e., consciousness, in that any theory of consciousness formation must provide comprehensive, accurate, and reasonable explanations of the two.
Regarding the gradedness of consciousness, four main theoretical hypotheses based on empirical studies have been proposed to account for it. The first one asserts that conscious processing follows an “all-or-none” mode, that is, information could be consciously perceived only when the processing on them meets certain criteria, otherwise the information remains unconscious and could not be perceived. The second one lowers the requirements of consciousness formation and suggests that the quality of conscious content could be improved as more neural regions are involved, which means that consciousness is formed following a “gradual” mode. The third one supports the idea of “all-or-none” mode and further improves it by introducing the concept of multiple dimensions of conscious representations. Following this hypothesis, the gradedness could be interpreted as the composition of multiple “all-or-none” patterns. The fourth one integrates the “all-or-none” mode with the “gradual” mode in a flexible way. Specifically, this hypothesis suggests that either of the two modes could be observed depending on the features of stimuli (e.g., low-level vs. high-level) or the experimental requirements. As to the richness of consciousness, on the one hand, the proponents of the “rich view” asserted that conscious representation is charactered by abundant conscious content and wide range of processing scope. Thus, conscious representation exceeds the capacity of cognitive access. On the other hand, according to the “sparse view”, cognitive access is necessary for the formation of consciousness. Only the information which is accessible to cognitive processing could be consciously perceived and therefore the content and the scope of consciousness processing are restricted.
However, current theories of consciousness formation are limited. They could neither give a unified explanatory framework for both the gradedness and richness of consciousness, nor provide an integrated interpretation for the complex performance of them under different experimental situations. To solve these problems, a promising way is to try to introduce different cognitive modules and processing mechanisms into the theoretical framework of consciousness. Basing on the interactions among these modules and mechanisms, it is possible to provide a comprehensive explanation for the complex phenomenon in consciousness formation. Two latest theories of consciousness formation may help to shed light on this approach. First, the Two Neural Network Theory suggests that there exist two neural networks in the human brain, namely the cognitive network and the theory-of-mind network, and consciousness was formed by the collaboration of the two networks. In this perspective, the information processed in the cognitive network would be reconstructed by the theory-of-mind network, and the diverse ways of the reconstruction results in the gradedness and richness of consciousness. The other theory named Higher-Order Mnemonic Theory proposes a framework containing mental quality space, perceptual reality monitoring and memory (i.e., implicit and explicit) to account for subjective experience. Following this theory, the gradedness and richness of consciousness might be the products of different ways of integrating mental quality space with memories.

Key words: consciousness, gradedness, richness, cognitive and neural mechanisms, theory of consciousness formation

中图分类号: