| | Preface |
| | Sources |
| 1 | | Introduction: Treating Consciousness as a Variable: The
Fading Taboo
by Bernard J. Baars |
| I | | Overview |
| 2 | | Consciousness: Respectable, Useful, and Probably
Necessary
by George Mandler |
| 3 | | Consciousness and Neuroscience
by Francis Crick and Christof Koch |
| II | | Consciousness in Vision |
| 4 | | Feature Binding, Attention and Object Perception
by Anne Treisman |
| 5 | | Effects of Sleep and Arousal on the Processing of Visual
Information in the Cat
by Margaret S. Livingstone and David H. Hubel |
| 6 | | The Role of Temporal Cortical Areas in Perceptual
Organization
by D. L. Sheinberg and N. K. Logothetis |
| 7 | | Investigating Neural Correlates of Conscious Perception by
Frequency-Tagged Neuromagnetic Responses
by Guilio Tononi, Ramesh Srinivasan, D. Patrick Russell, and
Gerald M. Edelman |
| 8 | | Temporal Binding, Binocular Rivalry, and
Consciousness
by Andreas K. Engel, Pascal Fries, Pieter R. Roelfsema, Peter
König, Michael Brecht, and Wolf Singer |
| 9 | | Disconnected Awareness for Detecting, Processing, and
Remembering in Neurological Patients
by L. Weiskrantz |
| 10 | | Blindsight in Monkeys
by Alan Cowey and Petra Stoerig |
| 11 | | Hemisphere Deconnection and Unity in Conscious
Awareness
by R. W. Sperry |
| 12 | | Separate Visual Pathways for Perception and Action
by M. A. Goodale and A. D. Milner |
| 13 | | Consciousness and Isomorphism: Can the Color Spectrum
Really Be Inverted?
by Stephen E. Palmer |
| III | | Attention: Selecting One Conscious Stream among
Many |
| 14 | | Strategies and Models of Selective Attention
by Anne M. Treisman |
| 15 | | Inattentional Blindess versus Inattentional Amnesia for
Fixated but Ignored Words
by Geraint Rees, Charlotte Russell, Christopher D. Frith, and
Jon Driver |
| 16 | | Aspects of a Theory of Comprehension, Memory, and
Attention
by Donald G. MacKay |
| 17 | | To See or Not to See: The Need for Attention to Perceive
Changes in Scenes
by Ronald A. Rensink, J. Kevin O'Regan, and James
J. Clark |
| 18 | | Function of the Thalamic Recticular Complex: The
Searchlight Hypothesis
by Francis Crick |
| 19 | | Selective Attention Gates Visual Processing in the
Extrastriate Cortex
by Jeffrey Moran and Robert Desimone |
| 20 | | Attention: The Mechanisms of Consciousness
by Michael I. Posner |
| 21 | | Attention, Awareness, and the Triangular Circuit
by David LaBerge |
| IV | | Immediate Memory: The Fleeting Conscious Present |
| 22 | | The Information Available in Brief Visual
Presentations
by George Sperling |
| 23 | | The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on
Our Capacity for Processing Information
by George A. Miller |
| 24 | | The Control of Short-Term Memory
by Richard C. Atkinson and Richard M. Shiffrin |
| 25 | | Verbal and Visual Subsystems of Working Memory
by Alan D. Baddeley |
| 26 | | The Prefrontal Landscape: Implications of Functional
Architecture for Understanding Human Mentation and the Central
Excecutive
by P. S. Goldman-Rakic |
| 27 | | Storage and Executive Processes in the Frontal
Lobes
by Edward E. Smith and John Jonides |
| 28 | | Consciousness and Cognition May Be Mediated by Multiple
Independent Coherent Ensembles
by E. Roy John, Paul Easton, and Robert Isenhart |
| V | | Internal Sources: Visual Images and Inner Speech |
| 29 | | Aspects of a Cognitive Neuroscience of Mental
Imagery
by S. M. Kosslyn |
| 30 | | The Neural Basis of Mental Imagery
by Martha J. Farah |
| 31 | | Experimental Studies of Ongoing Conscious
Experience
by Jerome L. Singer |
| 32 | | Verbal Reports on Thinking
by K. Anders Ericcson and Herbert A. Simon |
| VI | | Below the Threshold of Sensory Consciousness |
| 33 | | Distinguishing Conscious from Unconscious Perceptual
Processes
by Jim Cheesman and Philip M. Merikle |
| 34 | | The Psychological Unconscious: A Necessary Assumption for
All Psychological Theory?
by Howard Shevrin and Scott Dickman |
| 35 | | Brain Stimulation in the Study of Neuronal Functions for
Conscious Sensory Experiences
by B. Libet |
| VII | | Consciousness and Memory |
| 36 | | Memory and Consciousness
by Endel Tulving |
| 37 | | Conscious Recollection and the Human Hippocampal Formation:
Evidence from Positron Emission Tomography
by Daniel L. Schachter, Nathaniel M. Alpert, Cary R. Savage,
Scott L. Rauch, and Marilyn S. Albert |
| 38 | | Implicit Learning and Tacit Knowledge
by Arthur S. Reber |
| 39 | | Attention, Automatism, and Consciousness
by Richard M. Shiffrin |
| 40 | | When Practice Makes Imperfect: Debilitating Effects of
Overlearning
by Ellen J. Langer and Lois G. Imber |
| 41 | | The Neural Correlates of Consciousness: An Analysis of
Cognitive Skill Learning
by Marcus E. Raichle |
| 42 | | Availability: A Heuristic for Judging Frequency and
Probability
by Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman |
| 43 | | Experiences of Remembering, Knowing, and Guessing
by John M. Gardiner, Cristina Ramponi, and Alan
Richardson-Klavehn |
| 44 | | Measuring Recollection: Strategic versus Automatic
Influences of Associative Context
by Larry L. Jacoby |
| VIII | | Unconcious and "Fringe" Processes |
| 45 | | The Conscious "Fringe": Bringing William James up to
Date
by Bruce Mangan |
| 46 | | The Fundamental Role of Context: Unconscious Shaping of
Conscious Information
by Bernard J. Baars |
| 47 | | The Cognitive Unconscious
by John F. Kihlstrom |
| 48 | | Pain and Dissociation in the Cold Pressor Test: A Study of
Hypnotic Analgesia with "Hidden Reports" through Automatic Key
Pressing and Automatic Talking
by Ernest R. Hilgard, Arlene H. Morgan, and Hugh
Macdonald |
| 49 | | Anosognosia in Parietal Lobe Syndrome
by V. S. Ramachandran |
| 50 | | Implications for Psychiatry of Left and Right Cerebral
Specialization: A Neurophysiological Context for Unconscious
Processes
by David Galin |
| IX | | Conciousness as a State: Waking, Deep Sleep, Coma,
Anesthesia, and Dreaming |
| 51 | | Brain Stem Reticular Formation and Activation of the
EEG
by G. Moruzzi and H. W. Magoun |
| 52 | | Anatomical and Physiological Substrates of Arousal
by Arnold B. Scheibel |
| 53 | | On the Neurophysiology of Consciousness: An
Overview
by Joseph E. Bogen |
| 54 | | An Information Processing Theory of Anaesthesia
by H. Flohr |
| 55 | | Toward a Unified Theory of Narcosis: Brain Imaging Evidence
for a Thalamocortical Switch as the Neurophysiologic Basis of
Anesthetic-Induced Unconsciousness
by M. T. Alkire, R. J. Haier, and J. H. Fallon |
| 56 | | The Relation of Eye Movements during Sleep to Dream
Activity: An Objective Method for the Study of Dreaming
by William Dement and Nathaniel Kleitman |
| 57 | | The Brain as a Dream State Generator: An
Activation-Synthesis Hypothesis of the Dream Process
by J. Allan Hobson and Robert W. McCarley |
| 58 | | Lucid Dreaming Verified by Volitional Communication during
REM Sleep
by Stephen P. LaBerge, Lynn E. Nagel, William C. Dement, and
Vincent P. Zarcone, Jr. |
| 59 | | Commentary: Of Dreaming and Wakefulness
by R. R. Llinás and D. Paré |
| X | | Theory |
| 60 | | Consciousness and Complexity
by Giulio Tononi and Gerald M. Edelman |
| 61 | | Brain Learning, Attention, and Consciousness
by Stephen Grossberg |
| 62 | | A Global Competitive Network for Attention
by J. G. Taylor and F. N. Alavi |
| 63 | | Time-Locked Multiregional Retroactivation: A Systems-Level
Proposal for the Neural Substrates of Recall and
Recognition
by Antonio R. Damasio |
| 64 | | Visual Feature Integration and the Temporal Correlation
Hypothesis
by Wolf Singer and Charles M. Gray |
| 65 | | Metaphors of Consciousness and Attention in the
Brain
by Bernard J. Baars |
| 66 | | How Does a Serial, Integrated, and Very Limited Stream of
Consciousness Emerge from a Nervous System That Is Mostly
Unconscious, Distributed, Parallel, and of Enormous
Capacity?
by Bernard J. Baars |
| 67 | | A Neural Global Workspace Model for Conscious
Attention
by James Newman, Bernard J. Baars, and Sung-Bae Cho |
| 68 | | A Software Agent Model of Consciousness
by Stan Franklin and Art Graesser |
| | Index |