The neural monitoring of visceral inputs, rather than attention, accounts for first-person perspective in conscious vision

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Why should a scientist whose aim is to unravel the neural mechanisms of perception consider brain-body interactions seriously? Brain-body interactions have traditionally been associated with emotion, effort, or stress, but not with the "cold" processes of perception and attention. Here, we review recent experimental evidence suggesting a different picture: the neural monitoring of bodily state, and in particular the neural monitoring of the heart, affects visual perception. The impact of spontaneous fluctuations of neural responses to heartbeats on visual detection is as large as the impact of explicit manipulations of spatial attention in perceptual tasks. However, we propose that the neural monitoring of visceral inputs plays a specific role in conscious perception, distinct from the role of attention. The neural monitoring of organs such as the heart or the gut would generate a subject-centered reference frame, from which the first-person perspective inherent to conscious perception can develop. In this view, conscious perception results from the integration of visual content with first-person perspective. (C) 2017 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Publisher
ELSEVIER MASSON, CORPORATION OFFICE
Issue Date
2018-05
Language
English
Article Type
Review
Citation

CORTEX, v.102, pp.139 - 149

ISSN
0010-9452
DOI
10.1016/j.cortex.2017.05.019
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/311047
Appears in Collection
BC-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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