Experiments Prepare to Test Whether Consciousness Arises from Quantum Weirdness
Researchers wish to probe whether consciousness has a basis in quantum mechanical phenomena
Christof Koch is a neuroscientist at the Allen Institute and at the Tiny Blue Dot Foundation, the former president of the Allen Institute for Brain Science, and a former professor at the California Institute of Technology. His latest book is Then I am myself the world. Koch writes regularly for a range of media, including Scientific American. He lives in the Pacific Northwest.
Experiments Prepare to Test Whether Consciousness Arises from Quantum Weirdness
Researchers wish to probe whether consciousness has a basis in quantum mechanical phenomena
What Does It ‘Feel’ Like to Be a Chatbot?
Generative AI has made giant strides toward machine intelligence. Can machine consciousness be far behind?
A Cell Atlas Reveals the Biodiversity inside Our Head
The NIH’s Cell Census delivers on its promise by mapping the cells in the motor cortex
Electrodes That Stimulate the Brain Reveal the Roots of Conscious Experience
Applying electric currents reveals the function of varying brain regions and helps to alleviate neurological disorders
What Near-Death Experiences Reveal about the Brain
A close brush can leave a lasting mental legacy—and may tell us about how the mind functions under extreme conditions
Will Machines Ever Become Conscious?
AI may equal human intelligence without matching the true nature of our experiences
Is Death Reversible?
An experiment that partially revived slaughterhouse pig brains raises questions about the precise end point of life
What Is Consciousness?
Scientists are beginning to unravel a mystery that has long vexed philosophers
How to Make a Consciousness Meter
Zapping the brain with magnetic pulses while measuring its electrical activity is proving to be a reliable way to detect consciousness
Contacting Stranded Minds
Brain imaging can establish a two-way lifeline to some severely brain-damaged patients
The Footprints of Consciousness
The bits and pieces of the brain that render us conscious reside in places few suspected
Sleeping While Awake
During microsleep, the entire brain nods off so briefly that we often don’t notice it. Now research shows that individual neurons in the brain can slumber, too, especially when we are sleep-deprived
Sleeping with Half a Brain
Animals are not the only creatures who can be literally half asleep. Research shows we experience this, too
How the Computer Beat the Go Player
As a leading go player falls to a machine, artificial intelligence takes a decisive step on the road to overtaking the natural variety
Constructing the Modern Mind
From Aristotle to Watson, views on the mind, brain and soul have evolved. A brilliant new book adds perspective
How the Computer Beat the Go Master
As a leading go player falls to a machine, artificial intelligence takes a decisive step on the road to overtaking the natural variety
What a Long-Ago Epidemic Teaches Us about Sleep
A form of encephalitis that caused both wakefulness and profound somnolence reveals much about our inner clocks
Does Brain Size Matter?
Turns out some species are better endowed than we are in key cognitive regions
Teaching Machines to See
The search to grasp how A.I. neural networks process photos yields insights and weirdness
Will Artificial Intelligence Surpass Our Own?
A philosopher worries about computers’ ever accelerating abilities to outpace human skills
A Tribute to Oliver Sacks from Colleague and Friend Christof Koch
The famed neurologist–author found uniqueness in every patient and savored the miracle of existence, whether it be found in squirrel monkeys or people
AI Software Teaches Itself Video Games
Artificial intelligence is coming of age and challenging our belief that being smart and being conscious go hand-in-hand
Exclusive: Oliver Sacks, Antonio Damasio and Others Debate Christof Koch on the Nature of Consciousness
A few neurologists and brain scientists are proposing that the secret underlying all conscious activity must lie with the way cells respond to stimuli they receive from their environment. In a response to this suggestion, Christof Koch asserts that much more is required for a full theory of consciousness
Intuition May Reveal Where Expertise Resides in the Brain
Our ability to provide rapid, accurate answers engages a small area in the brain’s basal ganglia, a hub for learning and automatic behaviors