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Consciousness can be defined as the state of being aware of and able to think about one's existence, sensations, and surroundings. It encompasses two major components: awareness and arousal. Awareness pertains to the recognition of environmental stimuli and internal states. At the same time, arousal refers to the physiological readiness to engage with these stimuli, which varies significantly between states like sleep and wakefulness.
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Assessment and Communication for People with Disorders of Consciousness
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Why consciousness?

Robert J Aumann1

  • 1Department of Mathematics and Federmann Center for the Study of Rationality, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel.

Neuropsychologia
|January 27, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Conscious emotions are essential motivators for vital life tasks, driving actions through desires and expected positive feelings. The adaptive function of consciousness is to enable these conscious emotions to operate effectively.

Keywords:
Adaptive functionConsciousnessEmotionsEvolutionIncentives

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Science

Background:

  • Conscious emotions are fundamental to human motivation and action.
  • Automatic behaviors like breathing are exceptions to emotion-driven actions.
  • Incentives, such as hunger, are driven by emotions and motivate essential tasks.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the role of conscious emotions in motivating human behavior.
  • To elucidate the adaptive function of consciousness in relation to emotions.
  • To understand how emotions drive actions through desire and expected positive outcomes.

Main Methods:

  • Conceptual analysis of emotion and consciousness.
  • Examination of motivation and goal-directed behavior.
  • Exploration of indirect emotional influence on actions, using driving as an example.

Main Results:

  • Conscious emotions, like desire, initiate actions by seeking positive emotional outcomes.
  • Perception and conscious experience of the external world are necessary for emotional experience.
  • Consciousness enables emotions to guide both direct and indirect actions, including learned behaviors.

Conclusions:

  • Conscious emotions are the primary drivers of voluntary actions.
  • The adaptive role of consciousness is to facilitate the operation of conscious emotions.
  • Understanding conscious emotions is key to understanding human motivation and behavior.