Litcius/Paper detail

A neural correlate of sensory consciousness in a corvid bird

Andreas Nieder, Lysann Wagener, Paul Rinnert

2020Science223 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Subjective experiences that can be consciously accessed and reported are associated with the cerebral cortex. Whether sensory consciousness can also arise from differently organized brains that lack a layered cerebral cortex, such as the bird brain, remains unknown. We show that single-neuron responses in the pallial endbrain of crows performing a visual detection task correlate with the birds' perception about stimulus presence or absence and argue that this is an empirical marker of avian consciousness. Neuronal activity follows a temporal two-stage process in which the first activity component mainly reflects physical stimulus intensity, whereas the later component predicts the crows' perceptual reports. These results suggest that the neural foundations that allow sensory consciousness arose either before the emergence of mammals or independently in at least the avian lineage and do not necessarily require a cerebral cortex.

Topics & Concepts

ConsciousnessNeural correlates of consciousnessPsychologyPerceptionStimulus (psychology)NeuroscienceCognitive scienceCognitionCarrionCognitive psychologyBiologyEcologyNeural dynamics and brain functionMemory and Neural MechanismsFace Recognition and Perception