Your Brain Hallucinates Your Conscious Reality | Anil Seth | TED

11,110,299 views ・ 2017-07-18

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
Just over a year ago,
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for the third time in my life, I ceased to exist.
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I was having a small operation, and my brain was filling with anesthetic.
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I remember a sense of detachment and falling apart
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and a coldness.
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And then I was back, drowsy and disoriented,
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but definitely there.
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Now, when you wake from a deep sleep,
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you might feel confused about the time or anxious about oversleeping,
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but there's always a basic sense of time having passed,
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of a continuity between then and now.
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Coming round from anesthesia is very different.
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I could have been under for five minutes, five hours,
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five years or even 50 years.
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I simply wasn't there.
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It was total oblivion.
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Anesthesia -- it's a modern kind of magic.
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It turns people into objects,
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and then, we hope, back again into people.
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And in this process
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is one of the greatest remaining mysteries in science and philosophy.
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How does consciousness happen?
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Somehow, within each of our brains,
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the combined activity of many billions of neurons,
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each one a tiny biological machine,
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is generating a conscious experience.
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And not just any conscious experience --
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your conscious experience right here and right now.
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How does this happen?
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Answering this question is so important
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because consciousness for each of us is all there is.
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Without it there's no world,
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there's no self,
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there's nothing at all.
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And when we suffer, we suffer consciously
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whether it's through mental illness or pain.
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And if we can experience joy and suffering,
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what about other animals?
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Might they be conscious, too?
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Do they also have a sense of self?
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And as computers get faster and smarter,
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maybe there will come a point, maybe not too far away,
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when my iPhone develops a sense of its own existence.
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I actually think the prospects for a conscious AI are pretty remote.
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And I think this because my research is telling me
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that consciousness has less to do with pure intelligence
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and more to do with our nature as living and breathing organisms.
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Consciousness and intelligence are very different things.
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You don't have to be smart to suffer, but you probably do have to be alive.
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In the story I'm going to tell you,
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our conscious experiences of the world around us,
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and of ourselves within it,
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are kinds of controlled hallucinations
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that happen with, through and because of our living bodies.
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Now, you might have heard that we know nothing
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about how the brain and body give rise to consciousness.
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Some people even say it's beyond the reach of science altogether.
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But in fact,
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the last 25 years have seen an explosion of scientific work in this area.
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If you come to my lab at the University of Sussex,
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you'll find scientists from all different disciplines
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and sometimes even philosophers.
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All of us together trying to understand how consciousness happens
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and what happens when it goes wrong.
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And the strategy is very simple.
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I'd like you to think about consciousness
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in the way that we've come to think about life.
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At one time, people thought the property of being alive
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could not be explained by physics and chemistry --
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that life had to be more than just mechanism.
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But people no longer think that.
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As biologists got on with the job
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of explaining the properties of living systems
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in terms of physics and chemistry --
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things like metabolism, reproduction, homeostasis --
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the basic mystery of what life is started to fade away,
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and people didn't propose any more magical solutions,
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like a force of life or an élan vital.
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So as with life, so with consciousness.
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Once we start explaining its properties
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in terms of things happening inside brains and bodies,
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the apparently insoluble mystery of what consciousness is
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should start to fade away.
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At least that's the plan.
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So let's get started.
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What are the properties of consciousness?
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What should a science of consciousness try to explain?
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Well, for today I'd just like to think of consciousness in two different ways.
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There are experiences of the world around us,
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full of sights, sounds and smells,
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there's multisensory, panoramic, 3D, fully immersive inner movie.
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And then there's conscious self.
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The specific experience of being you or being me.
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The lead character in this inner movie,
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and probably the aspect of consciousness we all cling to most tightly.
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Let's start with experiences of the world around us,
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and with the important idea of the brain as a prediction engine.
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Imagine being a brain.
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You're locked inside a bony skull,
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trying to figure what's out there in the world.
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There's no lights inside the skull. There's no sound either.
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All you've got to go on is streams of electrical impulses
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which are only indirectly related to things in the world,
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whatever they may be.
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So perception -- figuring out what's there --
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has to be a process of informed guesswork
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in which the brain combines these sensory signals
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with its prior expectations or beliefs about the way the world is
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to form its best guess of what caused those signals.
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The brain doesn't hear sound or see light.
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What we perceive is its best guess of what's out there in the world.
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Let me give you a couple of examples of all this.
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You might have seen this illusion before,
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but I'd like you to think about it in a new way.
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If you look at those two patches, A and B,
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they should look to you to be very different shades of gray, right?
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But they are in fact exactly the same shade.
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And I can illustrate this.
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If I put up a second version of the image here
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and join the two patches with a gray-colored bar,
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you can see there's no difference.
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It's exactly the same shade of gray.
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And if you still don't believe me,
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I'll bring the bar across and join them up.
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It's a single colored block of gray, there's no difference at all.
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This isn't any kind of magic trick.
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It's the same shade of gray,
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but take it away again, and it looks different.
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So what's happening here
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is that the brain is using its prior expectations
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built deeply into the circuits of the visual cortex
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that a cast shadow dims the appearance of a surface,
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so that we see B as lighter than it really is.
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Here's one more example,
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which shows just how quickly the brain can use new predictions
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to change what we consciously experience.
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Have a listen to this.
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(Distorted voice)
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Sounded strange, right?
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Have a listen again and see if you can get anything.
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(Distorted voice)
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Still strange.
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Now listen to this.
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(Recording) Anil Seth: I think Brexit is a really terrible idea.
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(Laughter)
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Which I do.
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So you heard some words there, right?
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Now listen to the first sound again. I'm just going to replay it.
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(Distorted voice)
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Yeah? So you can now hear words there.
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Once more for luck.
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(Distorted voice)
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OK, so what's going on here?
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The remarkable thing is the sensory information coming into the brain
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hasn't changed at all.
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All that's changed is your brain's best guess
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of the causes of that sensory information.
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And that changes what you consciously hear.
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All this puts the brain basis of perception
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in a bit of a different light.
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Instead of perception depending largely on signals coming into the brain
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from the outside world,
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it depends as much, if not more,
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on perceptual predictions flowing in the opposite direction.
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We don't just passively perceive the world,
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we actively generate it.
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The world we experience comes as much, if not more,
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from the inside out
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as from the outside in.
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Let me give you one more example of perception
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as this active, constructive process.
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Here we've combined immersive virtual reality with image processing
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to simulate the effects of overly strong perceptual predictions
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on experience.
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In this panoramic video, we've transformed the world --
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which is in this case Sussex campus --
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into a psychedelic playground.
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We've processed the footage using an algorithm based on Google's Deep Dream
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to simulate the effects of overly strong perceptual predictions.
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In this case, to see dogs.
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And you can see this is a very strange thing.
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When perceptual predictions are too strong,
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as they are here,
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the result looks very much like the kinds of hallucinations
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people might report in altered states,
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or perhaps even in psychosis.
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Now, think about this for a minute.
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If hallucination is a kind of uncontrolled perception,
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then perception right here and right now is also a kind of hallucination,
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but a controlled hallucination
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in which the brain's predictions are being reined in
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by sensory information from the world.
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In fact, we're all hallucinating all the time,
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including right now.
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It's just that when we agree about our hallucinations,
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we call that reality.
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(Laughter)
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Now I'm going to tell you that your experience of being a self,
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the specific experience of being you,
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is also a controlled hallucination generated by the brain.
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This seems a very strange idea, right?
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Yes, visual illusions might deceive my eyes,
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but how could I be deceived about what it means to be me?
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For most of us,
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the experience of being a person
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is so familiar, so unified and so continuous
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that it's difficult not to take it for granted.
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But we shouldn't take it for granted.
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There are in fact many different ways we experience being a self.
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There's the experience of having a body
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and of being a body.
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There are experiences of perceiving the world
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from a first person point of view.
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There are experiences of intending to do things
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and of being the cause of things that happen in the world.
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And there are experiences
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of being a continuous and distinctive person over time,
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built from a rich set of memories and social interactions.
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Many experiments show,
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and psychiatrists and neurologists know very well,
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that these different ways in which we experience being a self
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can all come apart.
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What this means is the basic background experience
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of being a unified self is a rather fragile construction of the brain.
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Another experience, which just like all others,
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requires explanation.
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So let's return to the bodily self.
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How does the brain generate the experience of being a body
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and of having a body?
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Well, just the same principles apply.
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The brain makes its best guess
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about what is and what is not part of its body.
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And there's a beautiful experiment in neuroscience to illustrate this.
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And unlike most neuroscience experiments,
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this is one you can do at home.
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All you need is one of these.
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(Laughter)
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And a couple of paintbrushes.
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In the rubber hand illusion,
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a person's real hand is hidden from view,
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and that fake rubber hand is placed in front of them.
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Then both hands are simultaneously stroked with a paintbrush
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while the person stares at the fake hand.
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Now, for most people, after a while,
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this leads to the very uncanny sensation
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that the fake hand is in fact part of their body.
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And the idea is that the congruence between seeing touch and feeling touch
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on an object that looks like hand and is roughly where a hand should be,
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is enough evidence for the brain to make its best guess
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that the fake hand is in fact part of the body.
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(Laughter)
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So you can measure all kinds of clever things.
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You can measure skin conductance and startle responses,
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but there's no need.
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It's clear the guy in blue has assimilated the fake hand.
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This means that even experiences of what our body is
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is a kind of best guessing --
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a kind of controlled hallucination by the brain.
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There's one more thing.
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We don't just experience our bodies as objects in the world from the outside,
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we also experience them from within.
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We all experience the sense of being a body from the inside.
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And sensory signals coming from the inside of the body
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are continually telling the brain about the state of the internal organs,
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how the heart is doing, what the blood pressure is like,
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lots of things.
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This kind of perception, which we call interoception,
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is rather overlooked.
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But it's critically important
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because perception and regulation of the internal state of the body --
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well, that's what keeps us alive.
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Here's another version of the rubber hand illusion.
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This is from our lab at Sussex.
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And here, people see a virtual reality version of their hand,
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which flashes red and back
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either in time or out of time with their heartbeat.
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And when it's flashing in time with their heartbeat,
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people have a stronger sense that it's in fact part of their body.
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So experiences of having a body are deeply grounded
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in perceiving our bodies from within.
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There's one last thing I want to draw your attention to,
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which is that experiences of the body from the inside are very different
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from experiences of the world around us.
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When I look around me, the world seems full of objects --
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tables, chairs, rubber hands,
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people, you lot --
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even my own body in the world,
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I can perceive it as an object from the outside.
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But my experiences of the body from within,
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they're not like that at all.
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I don't perceive my kidneys here,
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my liver here,
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my spleen ...
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I don't know where my spleen is,
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but it's somewhere.
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I don't perceive my insides as objects.
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In fact, I don't experience them much at all unless they go wrong.
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And this is important, I think.
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Perception of the internal state of the body
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isn't about figuring out what's there,
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it's about control and regulation --
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keeping the physiological variables within the tight bounds
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that are compatible with survival.
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When the brain uses predictions to figure out what's there,
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we perceive objects as the causes of sensations.
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When the brain uses predictions to control and regulate things,
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we experience how well or how badly that control is going.
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So our most basic experiences of being a self,
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of being an embodied organism,
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are deeply grounded in the biological mechanisms that keep us alive.
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And when we follow this idea all the way through,
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we can start to see that all of our conscious experiences,
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since they all depend on the same mechanisms of predictive perception,
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all stem from this basic drive to stay alive.
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We experience the world and ourselves
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with, through and because of our living bodies.
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Let me bring things together step-by-step.
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What we consciously see depends
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on the brain's best guess of what's out there.
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Our experienced world comes from the inside out,
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not just the outside in.
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The rubber hand illusion shows that this applies to our experiences
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of what is and what is not our body.
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And these self-related predictions depend critically on sensory signals
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coming from deep inside the body.
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And finally,
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experiences of being an embodied self are more about control and regulation
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than figuring out what's there.
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So our experiences of the world around us and ourselves within it --
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well, they're kinds of controlled hallucinations
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that have been shaped over millions of years of evolution
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to keep us alive in worlds full of danger and opportunity.
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We predict ourselves into existence.
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Now, I leave you with three implications of all this.
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First, just as we can misperceive the world,
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we can misperceive ourselves
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when the mechanisms of prediction go wrong.
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Understanding this opens many new opportunities in psychiatry and neurology,
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because we can finally get at the mechanisms
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rather than just treating the symptoms
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in conditions like depression and schizophrenia.
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Second:
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what it means to be me cannot be reduced to or uploaded to
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a software program running on a robot,
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however smart or sophisticated.
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We are biological, flesh-and-blood animals
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whose conscious experiences are shaped at all levels
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by the biological mechanisms that keep us alive.
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Just making computers smarter is not going to make them sentient.
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Finally,
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our own individual inner universe,
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our way of being conscious,
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is just one possible way of being conscious.
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And even human consciousness generally --
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it's just a tiny region in a vast space of possible consciousnesses.
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Our individual self and worlds are unique to each of us,
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but they're all grounded in biological mechanisms
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shared with many other living creatures.
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Now, these are fundamental changes
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in how we understand ourselves,
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but I think they should be celebrated,
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because as so often in science, from Copernicus --
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we're not at the center of the universe --
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to Darwin --
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we're related to all other creatures --
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to the present day.
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With a greater sense of understanding
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comes a greater sense of wonder,
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and a greater realization
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that we are part of and not apart from the rest of nature.
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And ...
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when the end of consciousness comes,
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there's nothing to be afraid of.
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Nothing at all.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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