Defining the states of consciousness

Author: Tassi P//Muzet A
Affiliation:
Centre d'Etudes de Physiologie Appliquee du CNRS, 21, rue Becquerel, 67087 cedex, Strasbourg, France. tassip@nerochem.u-strasbg.fr
Conference/Journal: Neurosci Biobehav Rev
Date published: 2001
Other: Volume ID: 25 , Issue ID: 2 , Pages: 175-91 , Special Notes: Review , Word Count: 149


Consciousness remains an elusive concept due to the difficulty to define what has been regarded for many years as a subjective experience, therefore irrelevant for scientific study. Recent development in this field of research has allowed to provide some new insight to a possible way to define consciousness. Going through the extensive literature in this domain, several perspectives are proposed to define this concept. (1) Consciousness and Attention may not reflect the same process. (2) Consciousness during wake and sleep may not involve the same mechanisms. (3) Besides physiological states of consciousness, human beings can experience modified states of consciousness either by self-training (transcendental meditation, hypnosis, etc.) or by drug intake (hallucinogens, anaesthetics, etc.). Altogether, we address the question of a more precise terminology, given the theoretical weight words can convey. To this respect, we propose different definitions for concepts like consciousness, vigilance, arousal and alertness as candidates to separate functional entities.

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