PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

An adversarial collaboration protocol for testing contrasting predictions of global neuronal workspace and integrated information theory.

  • Lucia Melloni,
  • Liad Mudrik,
  • Michael Pitts,
  • Katarina Bendtz,
  • Oscar Ferrante,
  • Urszula Gorska,
  • Rony Hirschhorn,
  • Aya Khalaf,
  • Csaba Kozma,
  • Alex Lepauvre,
  • Ling Liu,
  • David Mazumder,
  • David Richter,
  • Hao Zhou,
  • Hal Blumenfeld,
  • Melanie Boly,
  • David J Chalmers,
  • Sasha Devore,
  • Francis Fallon,
  • Floris P de Lange,
  • Ole Jensen,
  • Gabriel Kreiman,
  • Huan Luo,
  • Theofanis I Panagiotaropoulos,
  • Stanislas Dehaene,
  • Christof Koch,
  • Giulio Tononi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268577
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 2
p. e0268577

Abstract

Read online

The relationship between conscious experience and brain activity has intrigued scientists and philosophers for centuries. In the last decades, several theories have suggested different accounts for these relationships. These theories have developed in parallel, with little to no cross-talk among them. To advance research on consciousness, we established an adversarial collaboration between proponents of two of the major theories in the field, Global Neuronal Workspace and Integrated Information Theory. Together, we devised and preregistered two experiments that test contrasting predictions of these theories concerning the location and timing of correlates of visual consciousness, which have been endorsed by the theories' proponents. Predicted outcomes should either support, refute, or challenge these theories. Six theory-impartial laboratories will follow the study protocol specified here, using three complementary methods: Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), Magneto-Electroencephalography (M-EEG), and intracranial electroencephalography (iEEG). The study protocol will include built-in replications, both between labs and within datasets. Through this ambitious undertaking, we hope to provide decisive evidence in favor or against the two theories and clarify the footprints of conscious visual perception in the human brain, while also providing an innovative model of large-scale, collaborative, and open science practice.