Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 4th July 2025, 12:07:09am EEST

 
Only Sessions at Location/Venue 
 
 
Session Overview
Location: FOYER
Date: Sunday, 06/July/2025
8:30am
-
7:00pm
REGISTRATIONS
Location: FOYER
Date: Monday, 07/July/2025
8:30am
-
9:00am
REGISTRATIONS
Location: FOYER
10:00am
-
10:30am
COFFEE BREAK
Location: FOYER
12:30pm
-
1:30pm
Poster Session 1- Agency, Decision-Making, Metacognition, Body & Self - LUNCH BREAK
Location: FOYER
 

P001_Public Communication Alters Private Confidence

Einar Randsted Andreassen1, Chris Frith2,3, Daniel Yon1,4

1: School of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck, University of London; 2: Institute of Philosophy, School of Advanced Study, University of London; 3: Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, University College London; 4: Institute for Advanced Study, Paris



P002_The Dual Effect of Saliency On the Relationship Between Local and Global Confidence

Nadia Hosseinizaveh1, Stephen M Fleming2,3,4, Pascal Mamassian1

1: Laboratoire des Systèmes Perceptifs, Département d’Études Cognitives, École Normale Supérieure, Paris Sciences et Lettres University, CNRS, Paris, France; 2: Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, London, UK; 3: Max Planck UCL Centre for Computational Psychiatry and Aging Research, University College London, London, UK; 4: Department of Imaging Neuroscience, University College London, London, UK



P003_Overestimation of Environmental Volatility Impairs Explicit Learning and Reduces Ocular Confidence in Psychosis

Yonatan Stern, Uri Hertz, Danny Koren, Roy Salomon

University of Haifa, Israel



P004_Can Imagining Actions as Occurring Involuntarily Cause Intentional Behaviour to Feel Involuntary?

Kevin Sheldrake

University of Sussex, United Kingdom



P005_Voluntary vs Forced Decisions Shared Neural Mechanisms for Evidence Accumulation and Motor Preparation

Lauren Claire Fong1, Robert Hester1, Philip Smith1, Stefan Bode1,2, Daniel Feuerriegel1

1: The University of Melbourne, Australia; 2: NYU Abu Dhabi



P006_Agency Strengthens Memory

Qiaoyue Ren, Bruno Herbelin, Olaf Blanke

Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, Neuro-X Institute, Faculty of Life Sciences, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Geneva, Switzerland



P007_Predictions And Outcomes Independently Shape The Subjective Experience Of Regret

Krisztina Jedlovszky1,2, Daniel Yon2

1: Department of Psychology and Language Sciences, University College London; 2: Department of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck, University of London



P008_Individual and Collective Decision Making on Moral Dilemmas

Nicolas Coucke, Eva Vives, Emilie Caspar

Universiteit Gent, Belgium



P009_Brain-Computer Interfaces: Disappearing or Extended Conscious Agent?

Robyn Repko Waller

University of Sussex, United Kingdom



P010_Collective Representation and Shared Agentivity in Artificial Architectures

Adel Chaïbi1, Eric Petit1, Grégoire Sergeant-Perthuis2

1: Intel; 2: Sorbonne Université



P011_Towards Understanding the Effect of Agency on Apathy

Juan Carlos Farah1, Yannick Mijsters1, Fosco Bernasconi1, Levi Goldberg2, Jevita Potheegadoo1, Halima Rafi1, Caroline Rouge1, Pierre Vassiliadis1, Friedhelm Hummel1,3, Olaf Blanke1,4

1: École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland; 2: Middlebury College, USA; 3: University of Geneva Medical School, Switzerland; 4: Hôpitaux Universitaires de Genève (HUG), Switzerland



P012_Altered Perceptual Decision-making In Schizophrenia

David M. Cole1, Anke Braun2, Lucca Jaeckel1, Alessandro Toso3, Tobias H. Donner2, Peter J. Uhlhaas2, Philipp Sterzer1

1: University of Basel, Switzerland; 2: Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany; 3: International School for Advanced Studies, Trieste, Italy



P013_Acting On Your Own: Sham-Cued Conflict Triggers Conflict Adaptation

Anastassia Loukianov, Axel Cleeremans

Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium



P014_Implicit and Explicit Perceptual Priors in Auditory Decision-Making: Effects of Psychosis Proneness

Anna-Chiara Schaub1, Anna-Lena Eckert2, Stijn Nuiten1, Veith Weilnhammer3, Philipp Sterzer1

1: University Psychiatric Clinics (UPK), University of Basel, Switzerland; 2: Department of Psychology, Philipps-University Marburg, Germany; 3: Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, USA



P015_Agency and Perception: How Action-based and Externally Cued Predictions Influence Visual Perceptual Precision

Thomas Holstein1, Bruno Berberian1, Jean-Christophe Sarrazin1, Andrea Desantis1,2,3

1: ONERA, France; 2: Institut de Neurosciences de la Timone (INT - UMR 7289); 3: Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center (INCC - UMR 8002)



P016_Neural Correlates Of The Sense of Agency In Free And Coerced Moral Decision-Making Among Civilians And Military Personnel

Emilie Caspar1, Antonin Rovai2, Salvatore Lo Bue3, Axel Cleeremans4

1: Moral & Social Brain Lab, Department of Experimental Psychology, Ghent University, Belgium; 2: Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), ULB Neuroscience Institute (UNI), Laboratoire de Neuroanatomie et de Neuroimagerie translationnelles and Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Hôpital Universitaire de Bruxelles (HUB), CUB Hôpital Erasme, Department of Translational Neuroimaging, Belgium; 3: Department of Life Sciences, Royal Military Academy, Belgium; 4: CO3 lab, Center for Research in Cognition and Neuroscience, Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium



P017_Judgments of Subjective Confidence Interfere with Perceptual Decision Making

Kit Spenser Double

University of Sydney, Australia



P018_Beyond Sensory Effects: Can Directive Representations Account for Agentive Experiences?

Artem Yashin

Moscow State University of Psychology and Education, Russian Federation



P019_The Limits of Measures of Metacognition

Sascha Meyen, Frieder Göppert, Volker H. Franz

University of Tübingen, Germany



P020_Metacognitive Monitoring in Tool Use Under Uncertainty

Polina Arbuzova, Carolina Gonzalez, Verena V. Hafner

Adaptive Systems Group, Department of Computer Science, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany



P021_Adaptation Of The General Metacognitive Mechanism

Tarryn Balsdon1, Paolo Bartolomeo2, Vincent de Gardelle3, Pascal Mamassian1, Marion Rouault2

1: ENS-PSL University and CNRS, France; 2: Paris Brain Institute and INSERM; 3: Paris School of Economics and CNRS



P022_Attentional Focus During Musical Performance: Insights From Motor Metacognition

Maria Paula Villabona Orozco1, Deliah Seefluth1, Anthony Ciston2, Michiko Sakaki1, Elisa Filevich1

1: Hector Research Institute of Education Sciences and Psychology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen; 2: Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Department of Neurology, Leipzig



P023_Metacognitive Feelings of Epistemic Gain in Psychedelic Induced Altered States of Consciousness

Federico Seragnoli

Geneva University Hospital, Switzerland; Lausanne University



P024_Domain-Specific Updating of Metacognitive Self-Beliefs

Kelly Hoogervorst1, Leah Banellis1, Micah Gallen Allen1,2

1: Center of Functionally Integrative Neuroscience, Aarhus University, Denmark; 2: Cambridge Psychiatry, Cambridge University, UK



P025_A Comprehensive Comparison of Signal Detection Theory-based Models of Perceptual Confidence and Metacognition

Manuel Rausch1,2

1: Katholische Universität Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, Germany; 2: Hochschule Rhein-Waal, Germany



P026_Metacognition and Active Information-seeking in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.

Pauline Laurent1, Childéric Dezier1, Nathan Faivre2, Mircea Polosan3, Michael Pereira1

1: Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Inserm, Grenoble Institut des Neurosciences, Grenoble, France; 2: Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Univ. Savoie Mont Blanc, CNRS, LPNC, Grenoble, France; 3: Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Inserm, CHU Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble Institut Neurosciences, Psychiatry Department, Grenoble, France



P027_Subjective Confidence and Subjective Difficulty Are Largely Indistinguishable: Insights From the Perception Census

Maxine T Sherman1,2, Anil K Seth1,2,3

1: Sussex Centre for Consciousness Science, University of Sussex, UK; 2: Department of Informatics, University of Sussex, UK; 3: CIFAR Program for Mind, Brain and Consciousness, Toronto, Canada



P028_Information Seeking Without Metacognition

Georgina Edwards-Lowe1, Elisa La Chiusa1, Helen Olawole-Scott1,2, Daniel Yon1

1: Birkbeck, University of London, United Kingdom; 2: Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom



P029_Neural Correlates Of Metacognition And Residual Awareness In Blindsight

Diane Derrien1, Clémentine Garric1,2, Sylvie Chokron1,2, Claire Sergent1

1: Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, CNUR-UMR8002,Université Paris Cité France; 2: Hôpital Fondation Adolphe de Rothschild, Paris, France



P030_Investigating Domain-specific and Task-specific Metacognition Using Pupillometry

Sabrina Lenzoni, Philipp Feistmantl, Joshua Horngacher, Jamie Kofler, Ophir Gat, Dorothea Hämmerer

University of Innsbruck, Austria



P031_Decoding Neural Signatures of Invisible Presence Across Belief Systems and Motor Domains

Michael Lifshitz1, Jonas Mago1, Guillaume Dumas2

1: McGill University, Canada; 2: Université de Montréal, Canada



P032_Nondual Floating: A Novel Approach to Studying Minimal Phenomenal Experience

Cyril Costines1,2, Marc Wittmann2, Mathis Trautwein1, Stefan Schmidt1

1: Medical Center – University of Freiburg, Germany; 2: Institute for Frontier Areas of Psychology and Mental Health (IGPP), Freiburg, Germany



P033_Vocal Signatures of Altered Self-consciousness

Joanna Kuc1,2, George Blackburne1,3, Rosalind McAlpine4, Daniel Lametti2,5, Jeremy Skipper1

1: Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London.; 2: OneReach.AI, Denver, Colorado, USA; 3: Department of Computing, Imperial College London; 4: Clinical Psychopharmacology Unit, University College London; 5: Acadia University, Wolfville, Canada



P034_An Algorithmic Agent Model of Pure Awareness and Minimal Experiences

Edmundo Lopez-Sola1,2, Roser Sanchez-Todo1,2, Jakub Vohryzek2,3, Francesca Castaldo1, Giulio Ruffini1

1: Neuroelectrics Barcelona, Spain; 2: Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain; 3: University of Oxford, UK



P035_"There Is A Stranger In My Mirror: Anomalous Self-Experiences In Dissociation In A Mirror Gazing Paradigm"

Camila Bottger1, Varsha Naveen1, Helge Gillmeister2

1: University of Essex, United Kingdom; 2: University of Essex, United Kingdom



P036_Virtual Reality and Psychoplastogens for Chronic Pain: Paving the way toward pharmacologically augmented VR treatments

Hector Taylor1,2, Jasmine Ho1,2,5, Robert-Zsolt Kabai1,3, Milan Scheidegger1, Felix Scholkmann3,5, Bigna Lengenhagger2, Petra Schweinhardt4

1: Department of Adult Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Psychiatric University Hospital, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland; 2: Department of Psychology, University of Zürich, Switzerland; 3: Neuroscience Center Zurich, University of Zürich and Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; 4: Department of Chiropractic Medicine, Balgrist University Hospital, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland; 5: University Hospital Zurich, University of Zurich, Biomedical Optics Research Laboratory, Department of Neonatology, Neurophotonics and Biosignal Processing Research Group, Zurich, Switzerland



P037_(Dis)Embodied Joint Agency in Human-VR Agents Interactions

Altea Vanni1, Jan Pohl2, Shihan Liu3, Jiaqi Yin3, Sylvia Xueni Pan3, Antonia F. de C. Hamilton4, Anna Ciaunica1,4

1: University of Lisbon; Portugal; 2: Dresden University of Technology; Germany; 3: Goldsmiths, University of London; United Kingdom; 4: University College London; United Kingdom



P038_Relationship between Interoceptive-Exteroceptive Integration and Dissociative Symptoms

Marta Łukowska1, Anna Bańbura2, Ari Nowacki3, Weronika Różycka4, Eva Schäflein5

1: Institute of Psychology, SWPS University, Katowice, Poland; 2: Institute of Psychology, Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland; 3: Institute of Psychology, University of Silesia, Katowice, Poland; 4: SWPS University, Katowice, Poland; 5: Department of Psychotherapy and Psychosomatic Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Technische Universität Dresden (TUD), Dresden, Germany



P039_Walking With My Heart - Exploring Effects of Synchronizing Internal Bodily Movement and External Bodily Action Through Real Time Sensory Feedback on Sense Embodiment in Depersonalization Experience

Celina Schadow1, Simon Knogler2, Mariana Puchivailo2, Lara Maister3, Anna Ciaunica2

1: Centre of Psychology, Faculty of Life SciencesHumboldt University Berlin, Germany; 2: CELab, Centre for Philosophy of Science, Faculty of Science, University of Lisbon, Portugal; 3: School of Psychology, Bangor University, United Kingdom



P040_ASMR Stimulus Bank

Lovell Blaise Jones, Sven Lembke, Lydia Robinson, Matt Bristow, Jane Aspell, Flavia Cardini

Anglia Ruskin University, United Kingdom



P041_Examination of Postural Sway as an Objective Measure for the Full-Body Illusion

Kenichiro Furuya, Yuki Tsuji, Katsuki Higo, Sotaro Shimada

Meiji University, Japan



P042_Positive Narrativity Enhances Full-body Illusion Toward A VR Avatar

Kureha Hamagashira, Miyuki Azuma, Sotaro Shimada

Meiji University, Japan



P043_Three Aspects of Self-Awareness and Self-Image Exposure in Early Childhood: A Longitudinal Study

Arleta Remiszewska, Krystian Barzykowski

Jagiellonian University, Poland



P044_Self-portrait of a Stranger: Self-face Representation and Interoception in Depersonalization Experiences

Lara Maister1, Anna Ciaunica2,3

1: Bangor University, United Kingdom; 2: University of Lisbon, Portugal; 3: Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, UK



P045_Investigating Interoceptive Alterations in Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders: A Multimodal Approach

Deniz Yilmaz1,2, Lukas Röll1, Isabel Maurus1, Lena Deller1, Nina Gottschewsky2, Miriam Zuliani1, Annemarie Weibel1, Jasmin Jannan1, Linda Sagstetter1, Nina Theis1, Johanna Spaeth1, Julia Segerer1, Michael Gaebler3, Antonin Fourcade3, Andrea Schmitt1, Peter Falkai1

1: LMU Klinikum, Germany; 2: Max Planck School of Cognition; 3: Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences



P046_One Step Closer to my Heart: Cardiac Cycle is Coupled with Footsteps in Typical but not in Depersonalisation Individuals

Veronika Alekseeva1,2, Alberto Colombo1, Simon Knogler3, Giulia Hambsch4, Ana Tajadura Jiménez3,5, Alejandro Galvez-Pol6, Julia Ayache7, Julien Lagarde8, Anna Ciaunica1,3

1: Instituto Superior Tecnico, University of Lisbon, Portugal; 2: University of Trento, Italy; 3: Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London; 4: University of Osnabrück; 5: Universidad Carlos III de Madrid; 6: University of the Balearic Islands; 7: Université de Montpellier; 8: Université de Pau et Pays de l'Adour



P047_The Association Between Interoceptive Prediction Errors And Voluntary Action: An Electroencephalography Study.

Akihiro Koreki1,2,3, Kazumasa Takenouchi4, Hisaomi Suzuki1, Jun Nakane1, Moriyuki Nakama4, Kumi Horiuchi4, Hugo Critchley5, Mahinda Yogarajah6, Rohan Kandasamy6, Yuri Terasawa7, Mitsumoto Onaya1

1: Department of Psychiatry, NHO Shimofusa Psychiatric Medical Center, Chiba, Japan; 2: Department of Psychiatry, NHO Chibahigashi Hospital, Chiba, Japan; 3: Department of Neuropsychiatry, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan; 4: Department of Clinical Laboratory Medicine, NHO Shimofusa Psychiatric Medical Center, Chiba, Japan; 5: Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, Sussex University, Brighton, UK; 6: Department of Clinical & Experimental Epilepsy, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, London, UK; 7: Department of Psychology, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan



P048_Self, Body and Emotion Perception in Depersonalisation and Meditation

Mariana Cardoso Puchivailo1,2, Anna Ciaunica2,3

1: Faculty of Medical Sciences of the Santa Casa of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil; 2: GAIPS INESC-ID, Instituto Superior Tecnico, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal; 3: Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London, United Kingdom



P049_Interoception, Personality, and the Embodied Nature of Affect

Ignacio Rebollo1, Aureeen deSouza1, Angela Lazova1, Xiao Yuan1, Soyoung Q Park1,2,3

1: Department of Decision Neuroscience & Nutrition, German Institute of Human Nutrition (DIfE), Nuthetal; 2: Neuroscience Research Center, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health, Neuroscience Research Center, Berlin; 3: German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD), Neuherberg



P050_Where Do We Draw the Line? How Differences in Perspective-Taking Shape Our Body’s Borders

Celia R Blaise1, Holly Clark1, Hannes P Saal1,2

1: Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom; 2: Neuroscience Institute, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom



P051_Reversing The Rubber Hand Illusion With Phenomenological Control.

Peter Lush, Zoltan Dienes

School of Psychology, University of Sussex, United Kingdom



P052_The Neural Basis of the Minimal Self: Cardiac Processing Independently Competes With And Facilitates Conscious Perception

Marie Loescher1, Patrick Haggard2, Catherine Tallon-Baudry1

1: Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives et Computationnelles, Département d’Etudes Cognitives, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Université PSL, INSERM, Paris; 2: Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London



P053_The Influence of Top-Down Interpretations on the Full-Body Illusion: An Examination of the Relationship Between the Observer-Self and Self-Body

Kazuki Yamamoto1, Ren Sakamoto2, Takashi Nakao2

1: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Japan; 2: Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Hiroshima University, Higashihiroshima, Japan



P054_Pain In Athletes: Understanding Its Neural Mechanisms To Prevent Overuse Injury

Flavia Cardini, Lovell Jones, Jane Aspell

Anglia Ruskin University, United Kingdom



P055_Measuring the Direction of Experienced Perspective: Physical and Virtual Gravitational Cues Modulate Audio-tactile Peripersonal Space

Hsin-ping Wu, Estelle Nakul, Florian Lance, Loup Vuarnesson, Bruno Herbelin, Olaf Blanke

Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience (LNCO), Neuro-X Institute & Brain Mind Institute, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Geneva, Switzerland



P056_The Impact Of Body Scan Meditation On The Perceptual And Neuronal Mechanisms Of Bodily Self-Perception

August Hägerdal1, Andrés Canales-Johnson2,3,4, H. Henrik Ehrsson1, Renzo Lanfranco1

1: Karolinska Institutet, Sweden; 2: University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; 3: University of Helsinki, Finland; 4: Universidad Católica del Maule, Chile



P057_Induction of Sense of Body Loss Using Virtual Reality

Ayato Imai1,2, Noriaki Kanayama2, Takashi Tsuchimochi1,2, Masayuki Hara1

1: Saitama University, Japan; 2: National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Japan



P058_Study on Effect of Haptic Manipulation on Self-Tickling

Shoki Hosoya1, Noriaki Kanayama2, Selim Habiby Alaoui1, Masahito Miki1, Masayuki Hara1

1: Saitama University, Japan; 2: National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Japan



P059_Heart Rate Synchrony as a Marker of Shared Experience During Movie Watching

Holly Gedling1, Howard Bowman1,2, Damian Cruse1

1: Centre for Human Brain Health and School of Psychology, University of Birmingham (UK); 2: School of Computer Science, University of Birmingham (UK)



P060_Heart-Mind Connection: Cardiac Interoception Modulates the Dynamic Interplay Between Autonomic Activity and Self-Referential Thoughts

Mai Sakuragi1,2, Satoshi Umeda3

1: Keio University Graduate School of Human Relations; 2: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science; 3: Keio University Faculty of Letters



P061_Brain-Heart Interactions and the Dying Brain

Diego Candia-Rivera, Sofia Carrion-Falgarona, Mario Chavez, Fabrizio De Vico Fallani, Stéphane Charpier, Séverine Mahon

Paris Brain Institute, France



P062_Stuck In Time And Space: Spatiotemporal Disruption Of Reality In Depersonalization

Julia Ayache1, Malika Auvray2, Anna Ciaunica3,4

1: EuroMov DHM, France; 2: Institut des Systèmes Intelligents et de Robotique, Sorbonne Université, CNRS, Paris, France; 3: GAIPS INESC-ID, Instituto Superior Tecnico, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal; 4: Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London, United Kingdom



P063_The Empirical Constraints of Uploading Identity

Zhaoting Liu1, Dezhi Luo2,3

1: Zhejiang Gongshang University; 2: University of Michigan; 3: University College London



P064_The Full-Body Illusion Toward a Heroic Avatar Enhances Physical Performance and Courage

Mika Ishizu, Miyuki Azuma, Yudong Zhang, Sotaro Shimada

Meiji University, Japan



P065_The Minimal Exposure Durations Required For Perceiving And Embodying Emotion

Renzo Lanfranco1,2, Axel Cleeremans2

1: Karolinska Institutet, Sweden; 2: Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium



P066_A Meta-Analysis Of The Influence Of Conscious Deliberate And Arbitrary Choices On The Readiness Potential And Its Impact On The Free-Will Debate

Cristina Poliziani, Uri Maoz

Chapman University, California, United States of America

4:30pm
-
5:30pm
Poster Session 2 - Cognitive Function, Mind wandering - COFFEE BREAK
Location: FOYER
 

P067_Sequence Generation in Capuchin Monkeys: Implicit or Explicit?

Raphaelle Malassis1, Laura Moscado1, Amanda Seed2, Jerome Sackur1

1: Laboratory of Cognitive Science and Psycholinguistics, ENS-PSL, France; 2: School of Psychology and Neuroscience, St Andrews University, UK



P068_Hedonic Reversal As A Case Against the Emotional Unconscious

Dezhi Luo1,2

1: University of Michigan; 2: University College London



P069_Neural Mechanisms And Memory Biases For Counterfactual Actions

Maia Juliet Armstrong, Daniel Yon, Silvia Seghezzi

Birkbeck, University of London, United Kingdom



P070_The Value Of Emotion Regulation: An fMRI Study

Carmen Siobhan Mcclean-Daoust, Daniel Campbell-Meiklejohn

University of Sussex, United Kingdom



P071_Pathways to Well-Being: The Role of Peace of Mind and Psychological Needs in a Sample of Greek University Students

Eleni Vasilaki, Aikaterini Vasiou, Angelos Gkontelos, Malamati Veloni, Christina Smaropoulou

University of Crete, Greece



P072_Categorized Affective Pictures Database ‏‏‏‏‏‏Designed for a Wide Age Range

Ilona Glebov-Russinov, Avishai Henik

Ben-Gurion University, Israel



P073_Loneliness and Interpersonal Emotion Regulation in Everyday Life

Jasmin Bruna Stariolo, Anh Tran, Daniel Feuerriegel, Katharine H. Greenaway

University of Melbourne, Australia



P074_Psychological Factors Influencing The Perceived Plausibility Of Episodic Counterfactual Thoughts

Ricardo Morales-Torres1,2, Kaylee Miceli1,3, Felipe De Brigard1,2,3

1: Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University; 2: Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University; 3: Department of Philosophy, Duke University



P075_Investigating The Restructuration Processes In “Aha! Moments”

Luna Leonardy1,2, Axel Cleeremans1, Emilie Caspar1,2

1: Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium; 2: Ghent University, Belgium



P076_Adaptation and Validation of the AI Literacy Questionnaire (AILQ) in Greek Higher Education: A Psychometric Study in Progress

Aristea Mavrogianni, Eleni Vasilaki, Aikaterini Vasiou, Angelos Gkontelos

University of Crete, Greece



P077_Reconceptualizing External Memory

Ruiyang Feng1,2, Zhaoting Liu3

1: The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (Guangzhou); 2: Capital University of Economics and Business; 3: Zhejiang Gongshang University



P078_Neural Signatures Of Prioritization And Facilitation In Recalling Repeated Items in Visual Working Memory

Abhishek Singh Narvaria1, Arpan Banerjee1, Dipanjan Roy1,2

1: National brain research centre, India; 2: School of Data Science and Artificial Intelligence, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Jodhpur, India



P079_The Role of Network Connectivity on Synaptic Plasticity Mechanisms Underlying UnconsciousWorkingMemory

Ignacio Castillejo, Miguel Vadillo

Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain



P080_Selective Attention and Explicit Awareness Independently Contribute to the Learning Process of Reward-Related Attentional Biases

Francisco Garre-Frutos1, Miguel A. Vadillo2, Jan Theeuwes3, Dirk Van Moonslear3, Juan Lupiáñez1

1: University of Granada, Spain; 2: Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain; 3: Vrije Universiteit of Amsterdam, Neetherlands



P081_Early and Late ERP Correlates of Consciousness - A Direct Comparison Between Visual and Auditory Modalities

Kinga Ciupińska1, Marcin Koculak1, Wiktoria Orłowska1, Michał Bola2, Michał Wierzchoń1,2

1: Consciousness Lab, Institute of Psychology, Jagiellonian University, 6 Ingardena Street, 30-060 Krakow, Poland; 2: Centre for Brain Research, Jagiellonian University, 24 Golebia Street, 31-007 Krakow, Poland



P082_Synaesthesia as a Model for Assessing Individual Differences in Visual Perception and Memory Performance

Emily Whelan1, Chhavi Sachdeva2, Rebecca Ovalle-Fresa2, Nicolas Rothen2, Jamie Ward1

1: University of Sussex, United Kingdom; 2: UniDistance Suisse



P083_Exploring the Impact of Cultural Differences on Cognitive Diversity and Mental Well-Being: A Comparative Study in the UK, Chile, and Japan

Tayebeh Ourtani1, Valdas Noreika1, Isabelle Mareschal1, Janelle Jones1, Yuri Miyamoto2, Pablo Sebastian Fossa Arcila3, Yuzuka Nakanishi2, Matias Javier Barros Esquenazi3

1: Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom; 2: Hitotsubashi University; 3: Universidad del Desarrollo



P084_The Relationship Between Emotional Age Stereotypes and Facial Emotion Perception in Younger and Older Faces

Misako Kawahara1,2, Atsunobu Suzuki1

1: The University of Tokyo, Japan; 2: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science



P085_When and How Music Promotes Fantasies: the Case of Maladaptive Daydreaming

Lilya Abergel1, Marco Sperduti2, Laura Ferreri3

1: Institut Jean-Nicod, ENS, Paris; 2: University Roma Tor Vergata, Italy; 3: University of Pavia, Italy



P086_Rethinking the Perception-Cognition Border: Olfaction as a Challenge to Format-Based Approaches

Yinzhu Yang

University of Cambridge, United Kingdom



P087_Decoupling Conscious Access From Sensory Processing Using the Attentional Blink and Retrospective Cues

Samuel Noorman, Jessye Clarke, Kirstine Sørøy, Claire Sergent

Université Paris Cité, France



P088_Investigating Age-Related Changes in the Interplay between Consciousness and Cognition

Julia E. Rathmann-Bloch1, James Knight2, Silvia Rognone2,3, Andrea I. Luppi1,4, Tristan A. Bekinschtein1, Daniel Bor1,2

1: University of Cambridge; 2: Queen Mary University of London; 3: University of Reading; 4: University of Oxford



P089_Temporal Binding Between Stimulus and Response

Takumi Tanaka1, Kazuma Takada2

1: The University of Tokyo; 2: Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology



P090_The Impact of Temporal Expectations and Attention on Conscious Visual Perception

Wiktoria Joanna Orłowska1,2, Michał Wierzchoń1, Dariusz Asanowicz1, Renate Rutiku1

1: Consciousness Lab, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland; 2: Doctoral School in the Social Sciences, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland



P091_Modelling the Phenomenological Present as an Emergent ‘Collective Memory Horizon’ Arising from Interactions Between Forgetful Components

Greg Cooper1, Thomas Varley2, Jeremy I. Skipper3, Rubén Herzog4

1: Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, UCL, United Kingdom; 2: Vermont Complex Systems Center, University of Vermont, Vermont, USA; 3: Department of Experimental Psychology, UCL, United Kingdom; 4: Dreamteam, Paris Brain Institute, Paris, France



P092_The Speed of Thought: Variability in Semantic Flow Reflects Attentional Traits

Jerome Sackur1,2,3, Adrien Kérébel1,2,3, Bente Vissel1,2,3

1: Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France; 2: Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique, France; 3: Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris Sciences et Lettres Université, France



P093_Flexible Tracking of Visual Rhythms Through Motor-Coupling and Sensory Simulation

Aaron Kaltenmaier1,2, Quirin Gehmacher1,2, Peter Kok2, Matthew H. Davis3, Clare Press1,2

1: Experimental Psychology, University College London, United Kingdom; 2: Department of Imaging Neuroscience, University College London, United Kingdom; 3: MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge



P094_Adaptation to Sound Statistics Explains Sensory Attenuation and Enhancement

Saskia Johnen, Eckart Zimmermann

Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Germany



P095_Temporal Anticipation Shapes Perceptual Experience

Gal Vishne1,2, Leon Y. Deouell1,4, Ayelet N. Landau1,3,4

1: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel; 2: Present address: Columbia University, NY, US; 3: University College London, UK; 4: Shared senior authorship



P096_Properties Of The Ongoing Context Modulate Temporal Integration

Ramya Mudumba, Narayanan Srinivasan

Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, India



P097_Duration Of Stimulus Awareness Modulates Visual But Not Frontal Areas Independent Of Task-Relevance

Antje Peters1,2, Annika Hense1, Maximilian Bruchmann1,2, Torge Dellert1,2, Robert Moeck1, Thomas Straube1,2

1: Institute of Medical Psychology and Systems Neuroscience, University Hospital Münster, Germany; 2: Otto Creutzfeldt Center for Cognitive and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Münster Germany



P098_The Effect of Temporal Attention on Visual Discrimination and Subjective Visibility Across Different Temporal Regularities

Christina Bruckmann, Assaf Breska

Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Germany



P099_Can we Integrate Information in Time? A Study in Cellular Automata About IIT and Temporality

Fernando Rodriguez-Vergara, Phil Husbands

University of Sussex, United Kingdom



P100_Breaking Suppression Response Times Predict Incidental Memory in Minecraft

Rina Y Schwartz1, Shira Papiashvili2, Ran R Hassin1,3

1: Department of Psychology, The Hebrew University; 2: Department of Cognitive and Brain Sciences, The Hebrew University; 3: The Federmann Center for the Study of Rationality, The Hebrew University



P101_The Role Of Conscious Motion Perception In Motor Control

Marjan Persuh, Alyssa Costigan

Manhattan University, United States of America



P102_From Shape to Meaning: Transient Acquisition Process of Grapheme-color Synesthesia

Asaka Ishikawa, Seiichiro Katsura, Eiko Matsuda

Keio University, Japan



P103_Synergistic Information Underlies Thalamocortical Integration of Auditory Prediction Error Processing

Claudia Pascovich1,2, Juho Aijala2, Santiago Castro-Zaballa1, Alicia Costa1, Alejo Rodriguez1, Pablo Torterolo1, Tristan Bekinschtein2, Andres Canales-Johnson2,3,4

1: Laboratory of Sleep Neurobiology, Department of Physiology, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay; 2: Consciousness and Cognition Laboratory, Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom; 3: Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad católica del Maule, Talca, Chile; 4: Neuroscience Center, Helsinki Institute of Life Science, University of Helsinki, Finland.



P104_Investigating Sex/Gender Differences in the Perception of Upper Palaeolithic Venus Figurines

Sam Hirst, Paul Pettitt, Robert Kentridge

Durham University, United Kingdom



P105_Processing Fluency and Intuitive Semantic Judgments: Insights from Eye-Tracking Analysis

Joanna Marta Sweklej1, Robert Balas2

1: SWPS University, Poland; 2: Institute of Psychology Polish Academy of Sciences



P106_Propositional Learning and Conscious Access in Evaluative Conditioning: A Developmental Perspective

Robert Balas, Joanna Wąsowicz, Patrycja Uram

Institute of Psychology Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland



P108_Longitudinal Study Investigating Grapheme-color Synesthesia and Ordinal Linguistic Personification from Infancy Through Elementary School Age

Eiko Matsuda1, Acer Chang2

1: Keio University, Japan; 2: Rikkyo University, Japan



P109_Dynamics Of Spontaneous Thoughts And Its Link To Trait Inattention

Adrien Kérébel1, Jérôme Sackur1,2,3

1: Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris Sciences et Lettres Université, France; 2: Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France; 3: Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique, France



P110_Exploring Temporal Orientation in Mind-wandering Across Mental Health Traits

Jingni Yan

Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom



P111_Multimodal Assessment Of The Effects Of Methylphenidate On Mind-wandering

Nicolás Bruno1,2,3, Antonella Prato1, Nicolás Rozenberg1, Tomás D'Amelio1,2, Federico Cavanna1,2, Juan Ignacio Piccinini1,2, Stephanie Muller1,2, Jeremias Inchauspe4, Lucila García Agüero1, Carla Pallavicini1,2,5, Jacobo Sitt3, Antoni Valero Cabre3, Enzo Tagliazucchi1,2,6

1: COCUCO Lab, Institute of Applied and Interdisciplinary Physics and Department of Physics, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina; 2: National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina.; 3: Paris Brain Institute - Institut du Cervau (ICM) (ICM), Paris, France; 4: Centro de Neurociencias Cognitivas, Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina; 5: Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, University of Paris Cité, Paris, France; 6: Latin American Brain Health (BrainLat), Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Santiago, Chile



P112_Disrupting the Stream of Consciousness: The Impact of External Distractions

Bente Vissel1,2,3, Adrien Kérébel1,2,3, Jerome Sackur1,2,3

1: Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, France; 2: Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique, France; 3: Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris Sciences et Lettres Université, France



P113_Discerning The Real-time Effects Of Mind Wandering On Musical Creativity: A Psycho-phenomenological Study Of Jazz Improvisation

Pedro T. Palhares1, Óscar F. Gonçalves2

1: Proaction Laboratory, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Coimbra, Portugal; 2: Brainloop Laboratory, CINTESIS@RISE, CINTESIS.UPT, Universidade Portucalense Infante D. Henrique, Portugal



P114_Why Does Mind Wandering Feel Effortless?

Yizhi Li

Ruhr-Bochum University, Germany



P115_Self-catching Episodes of Mind-blanking Resemble Attributes of Probed Mind Blanking Reports

Agustina Aragon Daud1,2,3, Sepehr Mortaheb1,2,6, Paradeisios Alexandros Boulakis1,2,5, Federico Raimondo3,4, Athena Demertzi1,2,5

1: Cyclotron Research Center In Vivo Imaging, GIGA Institute, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 2: Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS), Brussels, Belgium; 3: Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine, Brain and Behaviour (INM-7), Research Centre Jülich, Jülich, Germany.; 4: Institute of Systems Neuroscience, Medical Faculty, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany; 5: Psychology and Neuroscience of Cognition Research Unit, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 6: Lab for Equilibrium Investigations and Aerospace (LEIA), University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium



P116_Processing the Meaning of Speech During Mind-Wandering

Gal Chen, Rachel Finkelshtein, Ariel Goldstein, Ran Hassin, Leon Deouell

Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel



P117_Cortex-Wide Phase Coherence Of Ongoing Activity Induced By Psychedelics And Anesthesia In Mice

Callum Martin White1, Zohre Azimi1, Robert Staadt1, Chenchen Song2, Thomas Knöpfel3, Dirk Jancke1

1: Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany; 2: Nanyang Technological University, Singapore; 3: Hong Kong Baptist University, China



P118_A Computational Framework for Autonomous Shifts Between Focus State and Mind-Wandering using a Predictive-Coding-Inspired Variational RNN Model

Henrique Oyama, Jun Tani

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, Japan



P119_Decoding The Phenomenology Of Spontaneous Thought From Brain Activity: A Novel Approach Using EEG And Large Language Models.

Nicolás Bruno1,2,3, Federico Cavanna1,2, Federico Zamberlan1,2, Tomás D'Amelio1,2, Stephanie Muller1,2, Laura Alethia De la Fuente1,4, Antoni Valero Cabre3, Enzo Tagliazucchi1,2,5, Mirta Villarreal1,6, Carla Pallavicini1,2,7

1: National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina.; 2: COCUCO Lab, Institute of Applied and Interdisciplinary Physics and Department of Physics, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina; 3: Frontlab, Paris Brain Institute (ICM), Paris, France.; 4: Institute of Cognitive and Translational Neuroscience, INECO Foundation, Favaloro University; 5: Latin American Brain Health (BrainLat), Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Santiago, Chile; 6: Grupo de Investigación en Neurociencias Aplicadas a las Alteraciones de la Conducta (INAAC), Fleni-Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas Neurosciences Institute (INEU), Buenos Aires, Argentina; 7: Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, University of Paris Cité, Paris, France



P120_Music & Mind-Wandering: Examining the Impact of Perceived Music Structure on the Occurrence of Mind-Wandering

Liila Taruffi

Academy of Music, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong S.A.R. (China)



P121_Electrophysiological Signatures of Mind-wandering in Healthy Participants and Patients at Risk of Depression Relapse

Bruno Nicolas*1,2, Alice Guesdon*3,4,5, Sana Rebbah6, François-Xavier Lejeune6, Phlippe Fossati*1,2, Antoni Valero-Cabré*3,7,8

1: Control Interoception and Attention team, Paris Brain Institute, CNRS UMR 7225, Inserm U1127, Sorbonne-Université, Paris France; 2: Department of Adult Psychiatry, Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, APHP Sorbonne, Université, Paris, France; 3: FRONTLAB team, Cerebral Dynamics, Plasticity and Rehabilitation Group, Institut du Cerveau, CNRS UMR 7225, Paris, France; 4: COCUCO Lab, Institute of Applied and Interdisciplinary Physics and Department of Physics, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina; 5: National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina; 6: Paris Brain Institute – ICM, Data Analysis Core facility (DAC), Paris, France; 7: Dept. Anatomy and Neurobiology, Laboratory of Cerebral Dynamics, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, USA; 8: ECognitive Neuroscience and Information Tech. Research Program, Open University of Catalonia (UOC), Barcelona, Spain; * Equally contributing co-authors



P122_Conscious Visual Perception is Progressively Impaired in Alzheimer’s Disease

Jon Huntley, Benjy Barnett, Daniel Bor

University of Exeter, United Kingdom



P123_Temporal Perception Fragmentation in Schizophrenia

Sasha D'Ambrosio1,2,3, Francesco Tonoli1, Cristina Zarbo4,5, Donato Martella5,6, Giovanni De Girolamo5,7, Armando D'Agostino1,8, The Diapason Consortium5

1: Department of health sciences, University of Milan, Italy; 2: IRCCS Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi, ONLUS, Milan, Italy; 3: Department of Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy, University College London, London, United Kingdom; 4: Department of Psychology, University of Milan-Bicocca, Milan, Italy; 5: For the DIAPASON consortium; 6: Department of Statistics and Quantitative Methods, University of Milan-Bicocca, Milan, Italy; 7: Unit of Epidemiological Psychiatry and Digital Mental Health, IRCCS St John of God Clinical Research Centre, Brescia, Italy; 8: ASST Santi Paolo e Carlo, Milan, Italy



P124_Stuck In My Mind: How Depression Affects Ongoing Conscious Experiences That Are Resistant To Change

Clara Wakonigg Alonso, Sian Panton, William Strawson, Giulia Poerio, Theodoros Karapanagiotidis

University of Sussex, United Kingdom



P125_Spatial Organisation of Structural Correlations in Synaesthesia and Autism

William Roseby, Jamie Ward

University of Sussex, United Kingdom



P126_Neurophysiological correlates of consciousness: Insights from Blindsight

Yuranny Cabral Calderin1, Lucia Melloni1,2,3

1: MPI for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany; 2: Department of Neurology, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA; 3: Predictive Brain Department, Research Center One Health Ruhr, University Alliance Ruhr, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Bochum, Germany.



P127_Blind Eyes, Seeing Brain: Uncovering Neural Adaptation in Late Blindness

Sonia Mele1, Alessia Verroca1, Ilaria Siviero1, Javier Sanchez Lopez2, Chiara Mazzi1, Silvia Savazzi1

1: University of Verona, Italy; 2: Escuela Nacional de Estudios Superiores unidad Juriquilla, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México



P128_Unconscious face familiarity processing despite Cortical Blindness and Acquired Prosopagnosia

Tommaso Ciorli, Ylenia Camassa, Maria-Chiara Villa, Alessia Celeghin, Lorenzo Pia

University of Turin, Italy



P129_What the Eye Sees, the Mind Rejects: Visual Awareness of Food in Anorexia Nervosa

Myrto Dimakopoulou1, Tommaso Ciorli1, Maria Pyasik1, Matteo Martini1, Carla Andriulli2, Martina Romanisio2, Francesco Bevione2, Francesca Boggio Bozzo1, Giovanni Abbate Daga2, Lorenzo Pia1

1: University of Turin, Turin, Italy; 2: Molinette Hospital, Turin, Italy



P130_Altered Dynamic Functional Connectivity and Reduced Higher Order Information Interaction in Parkinson’s Patients with Hyposmia

Sneha Ray1, Navkiran Kalsi2, Henning Boecker3, Neeraj Upadhyay3, Rajanikant Panda1

1: University of California, San Francisco, United States of America; 2: Jindal Global University, India; 3: University Hospital of Bonn, Germany



P131_Altered Neuronal Activity Spread Across the Brain in Schizophrenia Assessed Via Co-kurtosis from fMRI.

Gabrielle Artiawan1, Fabian Hirsch1, Ângelo Bumanglag1, Yifei Zhang1, Bernhard Gleich2, Franziska Knolle1, Afra Wohlschläger1

1: Klinikum rechts der Isar of the Technical University Munich, Germany; 2: Munich Institute of Biomedical Engineering (MIBE), Technical University Munich, Germany



P132_Assessing consciousness in Alzheimer’s disease using the Perturbational Complexity Index

Giacomo Bertazzoli1, Daniel Bor2, Jonathan Huntley3

1: Department of Neurology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, United States of America; 2: Department of Psychology, Queen Mary's University of London; 3: Department of Clinical and Biomedical Sciences, University of Exeter



P133_Disruption of the Information Processing Hierarchy in Alzheimer's Disease and Cognitive Impairment

Keenan J. A. Down1,2, Jonathan Huntley3,4, Pedro A. M. Mediano4,5, Daniel Bor1,2

1: Queen Mary University of London; 2: University of Cambridge; 3: University of Exeter; 4: University College London; 5: Imperial College London



P134_Assessing Consciousness and its Cognitive Correlates in Alzheimer's Disease with the TMS-EEG Perturbation Complexity Index

Andrew E Budson1, Brenna Hagan1, Stephanie S Buss2, Peter J Fried2, Mouhsin M Shafi2, Katherine W Turk1, Kathy Xie1, Recep A Ozdemir2

1: VA Boston/Boston University, United States of America; 2: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center



P135_Two, Not One, Electrophysiological Correlates of Consciousness: Evidence From a No-report Inattentional BlindnessParadigm

Angelica Nicolacoudis2, Ugo Bruzadin Nunes1, Adi Sarig3, Nicholas Fish1, Liad Mudrik3, Michael Pitts2, Aaron Schurger1

1: Chapman University, United States of America; 2: Reed College, United States of America; 3: Tel Aviv University, Israel



P136_Regional Intrusion of Slow Waves Impairs Spatial Awareness in Patients with Visuospatial Neglect

Elisabetta Litterio1, Madalina Bucur1, Elena Focacci1, Michele Colombo1, Giulia Furregoni3, Nicholas Diani2, Jorge Navarro2, Alessandro Viganò2, Simone Sarasso1, Mario Rosanova1, Marcello Massimini1

1: University of Milan, Italy; 2: IRCCS Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi, Milan,Italy; 3: University of Camerino, Italy



P137_Spontaneous Arousal Fluctuations Shape Stimulus-Driven Visuospatial Attention

Ana-Maria Barosan1, Simon van Gaal1, Johannes J. Fahrenfort2, Lola Beerendonk1, Timo Stein1

1: Department of Psychology, Program Group Brain and Cognition, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; 2: Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Section Cognitive Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands



P138_Thinking Creatively About Creative Thinking: How To Conceptualize Creative Thought As Meaning Making

Marjan Nellie Sharifi

UC berkeley and Ecole normale superieure, United States of America

Date: Tuesday, 08/July/2025
8:30am
-
9:00am
REGISTRATIONS
Location: FOYER
10:00am
-
10:30am
COFFEE BREAK
Location: FOYER
12:30pm
-
1:30pm
PS3: Poster Session 3 - Altered States, NonOrdinary States, hallucinations, Mental Imagery - LUNCH BREAK
Location: FOYER
 

Effect of Light Wavelength on Pseudo-Hallucination Production in the Multi-Modal Ganzfeld

Kadirey Verwaerde1, Larry Douglas Fort1,2, Nicholas John Simos1,3, Athena Demertzi1,2,4

1: Physiology of Cognition Lab, GIGA-CRC In Vivo Imaging Research Unit, GIGA Institute, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium, France; 2: Fund for Scientific Research FNRS, Brussels, Belgium; 3: Computational Bio-Medicine Lab, Institute of Computer Science, Foundation for Research and Technology–Hellas, Heraklion, Greece; 4: Psychology and Neuroscience of Cognition Research Unit, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium



Preliminary Evidence Suggests Multi-Modal Ganzfeld Approximates the Hallucinogenic Effects of Moderate-dose Psilocybin

Larry Douglas Fort1, Nicholas Simos1, Sepehr Mortaheb2, Natasha Mason3, Pablo Mallaroni3, Johannes Ramaekers3, Athena Demertzi1

1: University of Liège, Belgium; 2: University of Antwerp, Belgium; 3: University of Maastricht, Netherlands



Bottom-up and Top-down Dynamics in Light-induced Visual Hallucinations

Oris Shenyan1,2, Laura Haye1, Chloe Templeman1, Matteo Lisi3, Georgia Milne1,2, John Greenwood1, Jeremy Skipper1, Tessa Dekker1,2

1: Department of Experimental Psychology, Psychology and Language Sciences, University College London, London, UK; 2: Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London, London, UK; 3: Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway University, London, UK



Do Brain Rhythms During Ganzfeld Reflect Changes in Attention or Sleepiness?

Kezia Anne Chuaqui1, Esther Thielking2, Nadee Zaman2, Cas Sommer2, Luca Iemi2

1: Columbia University, United States of America; 2: Barnard College, United States of America



The Neurophenomenology of Altered States of Consciousness mediated by Yoga, Breathwork and Meditation

Jessica Sophie Corneille1, Esperanza Jubera-Garcia2, William Rowlands1, Evan Lewis-Healey1, Barbara Jachs1,3, Tristan Bekinschtein1,3

1: Cambridge Consciousness and Cognition Lab, Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; 2: Bitbrain Neurotechnology, Spain; 3: Human Experience Dynamics, Cambridge Enterprise, United Kingdom



Comparing Complexity Measures for Distinguishing Conscious States

Catriona Osborn Moar1, Romy Beauté1, Lorenzo Pasquini2, Avery Ostrand2, Kate Allison2, Jan Ramaekers3, Robin Carhart-Harris2, Pedro Mediano4, Adam Barrett1

1: University of Sussex; 2: University of California San Francisco; 3: Maastricht University; 4: Imperial College London



Sensory-mediated Disintegration: Engineering Intensive VR and Breathwork Experiences To Induce Altered States Of Consciousness

Joshua Clingo, Jeff Yoshimi

University of California Merced, United States of America



Altered States of Viscereality: Augmenting Breathwork with Bio-Responsive Virtual Reality to induce altered states of consciousness

George Fejer1,4,5, Till Holzapfel2, Johannes Blum3, Andrés Gómez Emilsson7, Timo Siimon4, Michael Gaebler5, Bigna Lenggenhager6, Oliver Deussen8

1: ALIUS ResearchNetwork; 2: Intangible Realities Lab; 3: Pädagogische Hochschule Schaffhausen; 4: Humboldt University Berlin; 5: Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences; 6: Association for Independent Research; 7: Qualia Research Institute; 8: University of Konstanz



Elucidating the Mechanisms of Psilocybin Therapy's Antidepressant Actions Using Innovative Clinical Trial Design

Ishrat Husain

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Canada



Conscious Experience of the Divine: Brain Dynamics During Ayahuasca and Ceremonial Music Listening Among the Santo Daime.

Katarina Jerotic1, Bobby Tromm2, Christine Ahrends1,3, Pablo Mallaroni4, Natasha Mason4, Lillian Kloft4, Johannes T. Reckweg4, Kim van Oorsouw4, Stefan Toennes5, Johannes G. Ramaekers4, Gustavo Deco6, Morten L. Kringelbach1,7

1: Centre for Eudaimonia and Human Flourishing, Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom; 2: Neuronal Dynamics Group, Paris Brain Institute, Paris, France; 3: FMRIB, Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom; 4: Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands; 5: University Hospital Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany; 6: Center for Brain and Cognition, Theoretical and Computational Group, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain; 7: Center for Music in the Brain, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark



Altered States, Altered Choices: Exploring Reinforcement Learning Under Psychedelic Influence

Federico Amadeo Cavanna1,2, Stephanie Müller1,2, Enzo Tagliazucchi1,2,3

1: CONICET, Argentina; 2: University of Buenos Aires, INFINA, Argentina; 3: Latin American Brain Health Institute (BrainLat), Universidad Adolfo Ibanez, Santiago, Chile



The Effect Of DMT On EEG Network Efficiency And Segregation

Eleni Kroupi1, Helena Araujo1, Chris Timmerman2,3, Fernando Rosas4, Giulio Ruffini5, Aureli Soria-Frisch1

1: Neuroscience Department, Starlab Barcelona SL, Spain; 2: Centre for Psychedelic Research, Department of Brain Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College, London, UK; 3: Computational, Cognitive and Clinical Neuroscience Laboratory (C3NL), Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College, London, UK; 4: Data Science Institute Imperial College London London, UK; 5: Brain Modelling Department, Neuroelectrics, Barcelona, Spain



Big Claims About Small Doses: What Microdosing Psychedelics Can Reveal About Cognition, Beliefs and Consciousness

Vince Polito1, Paul Liknaitzky2

1: Macquarie University, Australia; 2: Monash University, Australia



Co-Creating Altered States of Consciousness: The Intersubjective Field in Psychedelic Therapy

Lena Adel

McGill University, Montreal, Canada



Comparative Connectivity Profiles of Psychedelics and Related Compounds: Insights from Resting-State fMRI

Mihai Avram

University of Lübeck, Germany



Effects of Low-Dose LSD on Perceptual Decision Making in Healthy Subjects

Lucca F. Jaeckel1, Deborah Logvinski1, Ariane Oettli1, Daniel Lewis1, Mika Kanana1, Felix Müller1,2, Nicolai Rohner1, Peter R. Murphy3, Anna M. Becker2, Tobias H. Donner4, Matthias E. Liechti2, Philipp Sterzer1

1: University of Basel, Department of Psychiatry (UPK) and Department of Clinical Research, Switzerland; 2: University Hospital Basel and University of Basel, Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Department of Biomedicine and Department of Clinical Research, Switzerland; 3: Maynooth University, Department of Psychology, Ireland; 4: University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Department of Neurophysiology and Pathophysiology, Germany



Trauma Under Psychedelics: How Trauma During Altered States Of Consciousness Impacts Cognitive, Physiological Neural And Clinical Outcomes

Roy Salomon

University of Haifa, Israel



Transient Or Transformative? Psychedelics And Long-term Change

Chiara Caporuscio1,2

1: Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin; 2: Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nurnberg



Synthetic Trips: A Universal Embedding for Psychedelic-Induced Neural and Phenomenological States

Aimane Raguadi1, Greg Cooper2, Jeremy Skipper3, Ravi Das2, Evan Lewis-Healey4, Tristan Bekinschtein4, Enzo Tagliazucchi5, Carla Pallavicini5, Federico Cavanna5, Tomas D'Amelio5, Laura de la Fuente5, Debora Copa5, Stephanie Muller5, Nicolas Bruno5

1: University College London, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, United Kingdom; 2: University College London, Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, United Kingdom; 3: University College London, Department of Experimental Psychology, United Kingdom; 4: University of Cambridge, Department of Psychology; 5: University of Buenos Aires, Department of Physics



Spatiotemporal Brain Activity Under DMT Reveals Reduced Synchronization and Increased Complexity

Gabriela Sawicka1, Elvira Garcia Guzman1, Marian Martinez Marin1, Jakub Vohryzek1, Yonatan Sanz Perl1,2,3, Morten L Kringelbach4,5,6, Robin Carhart-Harris7, Christopher Timmermann8, Gustavo Deco1,9,10

1: Center for Brain and Cognition, Computational Neuroscience Group, Department of Information and Communication Technologies, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Roc Boronat 138, Barcelona, 08018, Spain; 2: National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET), CABA, Buenos Aires, Argentina; 3: Paris Brain Institute (ICM), Paris, France; 4: Center for Music in the Brain, Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University & The Royal Academy of Music, Aarhus/Aalborg 8000, Denmark; 5: Centre for Eudaimonia and Human Flourishing, Department of Psychiatry, Linacre College, University of Oxford, Oxford OX39BX, United Kingdom; 6: Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford OX37JX, United Kingdom; 7: Psychedelics Division, Neuroscape, Department of Neurology, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA; 8: Centre for Psychedelic Research, Department of Brain Sciences, Imperial College London, London, UK; 9: Department of Information and Communication Technologies, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain; 10: Institució Catalana de la Recerca i Estudis Avançats (ICREA), Barcelona, Spain



Neural Information Dynamics in Altered States of Consciousness

Alberto Liardi1, George Blackburne2,1, Pedro A.M. Mediano1,2

1: Department of Computing, Imperial College London, UK; 2: Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, UK



Processing of Self-related Thoughts in Experienced Users of Classic Psychedelics: a Source Localisation EEG Study

Anastasia Ruban1, Mikołaj Magnuski2, Justyna Hobot3, Paweł Orłowski4, Aleksandra Kołodziej5, Michał Bola4, Aneta Brzezicka5

1: Institute of Psychology, Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University, Poland; 2: Center of Excellence for Neural Plasticity and Brain Disorders: BRAINCITY, Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, Warsaw, Poland; 3: Consciousness Lab, Psychology Institute, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland; 4: Centre for Brain Research, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland; 5: Department of Psychology, University SWPS, Warsaw, Poland



Subjective Effects of Intranasal 5-MeO-DMT: A Phenomenological Investigation

Shayam Suseelan1,2, Tommaso Barba1, James Sanders1, David Erritzoe1, Christopher Timmermann1

1: Centre for Psychedelic Research, Imperial College London.; 2: Centre for Neuroimaging Sciences, King’s College London



Predicting Psychedelic Responses: Toward a Personalized Approach to Psychedelic Therapy

Michael Edward Angyus

Psynautics, United States of America



Ontologically Diversifying Experiences: How Psychedelics Transform Selfhood, Relationships, and Reality

Eirini Ketzitzidou Argyri

University of Exeter, United Kingdom



The Role of the Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex in Ego Dissolution and Emotional Arousal During the Psychedelic State

Clayton Ronald Coleman1, Kenneth Shinozuka2,3,4

1: King's College London, London, UK; 2: Centre for Eudaimonia and Human Flourishing, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; 3: Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; 4: Oxford Mathematics of Consciousness and Application Network, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK



Time-Resolved Neural and Experience Dynamics of Medium and High-dose DMT

Evan Lewis-Healey1, Carla Pallavicini2,3, Federico Cavanna2, Tomas D'Amelio2, Laura Alethia De La Fuente2, Debora Copa2, Stephanie Muller2, Nicolas Bruno2, Enzo Tagliazucchi2,4, Tristan Bekinschtein2

1: University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; 2: University of Buenos Aires, Argentina; 3: The Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, University of Paris, Paris, France; 4: Latin American Brain Health Institute (BrainLat), Universidad Adolfo Ibanez, Santiago, Chile



Effects Of 5-MeO-DMT On The Human Brain

George Blackburne1,2, Ros McAlpine1, Marco Fabus3, Alberto Liardi2, Sunjeev Kamboj1, Pedro Mediano1,2, Jeremy Skipper1

1: University College London; 2: Imperial College London; 3: University of Oxford



An Interhemispheric Frontoparietal Network Supports Hypnotic States

Maria Niedernhuber

University of Cambridge, United Kingdom



Navigating The Inner Landscape: Minds, States, & Experiences

Oisin Hugh Clancy

Compassion Institute



Heartbeat-Evoked Potentials Track Depth of Meditation

Mihir Nath, Nicco Reggente

Institute for Advanced Consciousness Studies, United States of America



Brain Functional Connectivity Demonstrates Changes in Nonlinear Processing in Long-term Practitioners of Transcendental Meditation

Alejandro Chandia-Jorquera1, Sean D. van Mil2, Mar Estarellas1,3, Claudia Pascovich1,4, Andres Canales-Johnson1,5,6

1: Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.; 2: Conscious Brain Lab, Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.; 3: Department of Biological and Experimental Psychology, Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom; 4: Laboratory of Sleep Neurobiology, Department of Physiology, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay.; 5: Neuroscience Center, Helsinki Institute of Life Science, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.; 6: Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad Catolica del Maule, Talca, Chile.



Beyond Pathology: Expert Consensus on the Intersection of Emergent Experiences and Mental and Medical Conditions

Hannah Biddell, Beata Grobenski, Daniel Ingram

Emergence Benefactors, United States



Spontaneous Unmedicated Labour Mimics Altered States

Maria Balaet

Imperial College London, United Kingdom



Neural Complexity and Extended Cessations: A Source-localized Meg-Eeg Analysis of the Advanced Meditative Endpoint Nirodha Samapatti

Kenneth Shinozuka1, Matthew Sacchet2

1: University of Oxford, United Kingdom; 2: Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, United States



Virtual Reality Hypnosis Fails to Enhance Hypnotic Experience in Low-Suggestible Individuals

Aminata Bicego1,2, Melanie Louras3,4, Luca La Fisca5, Matei Manca5, Clemence Toussaint6, Caroline Quoilin6, Olivia Gosseries1,3,4, Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse1,7

1: Conscious Care Lab, GIGA Consciousness, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 2: Cognitive Psychology Unit, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands; 3: Coma Science Group, GIGA Consciousness, Liège University, Liège, Belgium; 4: Centre du Cerveau, University Hospital of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 5: ISIA Lab, Numediart Institute, Mons University, Mons, Belgium; 6: Oncomfort SA, Wavre, Belgium; 7: Algology Interdisciplinary Center, Liège University Hospital, Liège, Belgium



Positively-Valenced Meditation-Induced Self-Boundary Dissolution Is Associated With MEG-Markers Of Death Acceptance

Yair Dor-Ziderman1,2,3, Yoav Schweitzer1,2,3, Ohad Nave4, Fynn-Mathis Trautwein5,6, Stephen Fulder7, Antoine Lutz8, Abraham Goldstein9,10, Aviva Berkovich-Ohana1,2,3

1: Integrated Brain and Behavior Research Center (IBBRC), University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.; 2: Edmond J. Safra Brain Research Center, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.; 3: Faculty of Education, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.; 4: Department of Cognitive Sciences, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel.; 5: Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.; 6: Institute for Frontier Areas of Psychology and Mental Health, Freiburg, Germany.; 7: The Israel Insight Society (Tovana), Kibbutz Ein-Dor, Israel.; 8: Eduwell team, Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, INSERM, Lyon 1 University, Lyon, France.; 9: Department of Psychology, Bar Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel.; 10: Gonda Brain Research Center, Bar Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel.



The Rhythms of Trance: An Anthropological and Neuroscientific Perspective on Music-Induced Non-Ordinary States of Consciousness

Athanasia Kontouli1, Michael Hove2, Alexander Lehmann3, Peter Vuust1, Peter Keller1

1: Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark; 2: Fitchburg State University, Massachusetts, USA; 3: McGill University, Montreal, Canada



Meditation Induces Shifts in Neural Oscillations, Brain Complexity and Critical Dynamics

Annalisa Pascarella1, Philipp Tholke2, David Meunier3, Jordan O'Byrne2, Tarek Lajnef4, Antonino Raffone5, Roberto Guidotti6,7, Vittorio Pizzella6,7, Laura Marzetti6,8, Karim Jerbi2,9,10

1: Institute for Applied Mathematics ”M. Picone”, CNR, Rome, Italy; 2: Department of Psychology, University of Montreal, QC, Canada; 3: Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS, INT, Inst Neurosci Timone, Marseille, France; 4: Centre de recherche du CHUM, Montreal, QC, Canada; 5: Department of Psychology, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy; 6: Department of Neuroscience, Imaging and Clinical Sciences, University of Chieti-Pescara, Italy; 7: Institute for Advanced Biomedical Technologies, University of Chieti-Pescara, Italy; 8: Department of Engineering and Geology, University of Chieti-Pescara, Pescara, Italy; 9: Mila, Quebec AI institute, Montreal, QC, Canada; 10: UNIQUE Center, Quebec Neuro-AI Research Center, Montreal, QC, Canada



Of Hidden Springs and Endless Oceans

Ronald Sladky

University of Vienna, Austria



Valence, Uncertainty and Meditative Experience: Understanding Affective Valence with the Active Inference Framework

Shawn Prest

Monash University, Australia



More than Attention: Brief Practice of Focused-attention Mindfulness Suppresses Automatic Word Meaning Processing

Beidi Pan2,3, Jiaqiu Vince Sun1,2, Xing Tian2

1: Center for Neural Science, New York University, New York, United States; 2: New York University Shanghai, Shanghai, People's Republic of China; 3: The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States



Neurofeedback As A Mirror For Meditation-induced Self-boundary Dissolution - Closing The Loop Between Phenomenology And Neural Activity

Henrik Röhr1,2, Daniel Atad3, Peer Vollert1, Julian Kuhlemann1, Luca Saini1, Aviva Berkovich-Ohana3, Stefan Schmidt1, Marieke van Vugt2, Fynn-Mathis Trautwein1

1: University Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany; 2: University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands; 3: University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel



Shared Neural Processes Induced By Hypnotic Verbal Suggestion For Pain Modulation

Dylan Sutterlin-guindon1,2, Jen-I Chen2, Mathieu Landry3, Lune Bellec1,2, Simona Brambati1,2, David Ogez4, Mathieu Piché5, Pierre Rainville2,6

1: Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Canada.; 2: Centre de recherche de l’Institut universitaire de gériatrie de Montréal, Canada; 3: Department of psychology, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, QC, Canada; 4: Department of Anesthesiology and pain Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Canada; 5: Department of Anatomy, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, QC, Canada; 6: Stomatology Department, Faculté de médecine dentaire, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Canada.



Integrated Phenomenology and Brain Connectivity Demonstrate Changes in Nonlinear Processing in Jhana Advanced Meditation

Mar Estarellas1, Sean van Mil2, Ruby Potash3, Andres Canales-Johnson4, Matthew Sacchet3

1: Division of Social and Transcultural Psychiatry, McGill University, Canada; 2: Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; 3: Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, United States; 4: Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom



What Kind of Suffering Does Meditation Reduce?

Vismay Agrawal1, Ruben Laukkonen2

1: Monash Centre for Consciousness and Contemplative Studies, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia; 2: Faculty of Health, Southern Cross University, Gold Coast, QLD, Australia



Contemplative Path or Pathology? A Culturally-Sensitive Approach to Meditation-Related Difficulties in Abrahamic Meditative Traditions

Nathan Elon Fisher

McGill University, Canada



Holy Spirit or Holy Psyche? Energy-like Somatic Experiences in Contemporary Abrahamic Meditative Traditions

Nathan Elon Fisher1, Elisabeth Irvine1, Michael Yonkovig2, David Cooper3, Michael Lifshitz1

1: McGill University, Canada; 2: McLean Hospital, Harvard University; 3: Brown University



Altering The Sense of Self In Meditation With One’s Avatar In Virtual Reality Enhances Self-compassion And Perspective-taking

Bruno Herbelin1, Hang Yang1, Loup Vuarnesson1,3, Chuong Ngo3, Olaf Blanke1,2

1: Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, Neuro-X Institute and Brain-Mind Institute, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland; 2: Geneva University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland; 3: All Here SA, Geneva, Switzerland



Religious Experiences In The Lab? Uncertainty, Cultural Learning, And Feelings Of Presence

Jana Nenadalová1, Piotr Szymanek2, Roman Husarski2, Bartosz Baran2, Michiel van Elk3, Mateusz Hohol2

1: LEVYNA Laboratory for the Experimental Research of Religion, Masaryk University, Czech Republic; 2: Mathematical Cognition and Learning Lab, Jagellonian University; 3: Cognitive Psychology unit, Leiden University



Decoding Sense Of Reality: A VR-EEG Study Of Virtual Hallucinations

Reina van der Goot1,2, Yair Zvilichovsky1, Abraham Goldstein1, Roy Salomon2

1: Bar Ilan University; 2: Haifa University



Comparing Subjective Report Elicitation Methods for Psychiatric Symptom Prediction: A Computational Approach

Shawn Manuel1,3, Jean Gagnon1, Frédéric Gosselin1, Vincent Taschereau-Dumouchel2,3

1: Département de Psychologie, Université de Montréal; 2: Département de Psychiatrie et d'Addictologie, Université de Montréal; 3: Centre de Recherche de l'Institut Universitaire en Santé Mentale de Montréal



Hallucination as Embodied Imagination

Daniel Kim

University of York, United Kingdom



Subjective and Physiological Effects of Phenomenologically Distinct Simulated Hallucinations in Virtual Reality

Paweł Motyka1,2, Michał Gacka2, Colin Ayres2,3, Bartłomiej Karasek1, Grzegorz Pochwatko1, Keisuke Suzuki4,5

1: Institute of Psychology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland; 2: Faculty of Psychology, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland; 3: Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, USA; 4: Center for Human Nature, Artificial Intelligence and Neuroscience (CHAIN), Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan; 5: Sussex Centre for Consciousness Science, University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom



Neural Mechanisms of the Sense of Reality: An fMRI Study

Gadi Drori1, Alon Asaf2, Shiraz Azulay2, Yair Zvilichovsky1, Roy Salomon2

1: Bar Ilan University, Israel; 2: Haifa University, Israel



A Novel Questionnaire to Measure the Contents of Visual Hallucinations

Trevor David Hewitt1, David Schwartzman1, Anil K. Seth1,2

1: University of Sussex, United Kingdom; 2: Program for Brain, and Consciousness, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR), Toronto, Canada



Neural Correlates of Cognitive Impairments in Patients with Parkinson’s Disease with Minor and Well-Structured Hallucinations

Lada Kohoutova1, Fosco Bernasconi1, Jevita Potheegadoo1, Olaf Blanke1,2

1: Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, Neuro-X Institute, Faculty of Life Sciences, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL), Geneva, Switzerland; 2: Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland



Altered Prior Weighting in Hallucinations: A Hierarchical Predictive Processing Approach

Maria Bierlein1, Philip Corlett2, Philipp Sterzer1

1: Department of Psychiatry (UPK), University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.; 2: Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.



Modeling Delusional Experiences in the Human Brain

Arina Ujevco1,2, Ian Charest1, Pierre Orban2, Vincent Taschereau-Dumouchel2,3

1: Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada; 2: Centre de recherche de l'Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada; 3: Department of Psychiatry and Addictology, Université de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada



Behavioural and Neural Correlates of Presence Hallucinations with Perceived Identity in Parkinson’s Disease

Neza Vehar1, Jevita Potheegadoo1, Léa Florence Duong Phan Thanh1, Fosco Bernasconi1, Olaf Blanke1,2

1: Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, Neuro-X Institute, School of Life Sciences, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Geneva, Switzerland; 2: Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Geneva University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland



What Makes Mental Images Vivid? Sharpness As The Key Visual Dimension

Xueyi Huang1, Angela Shen2, Emil Olsson2, Kiarra Michelle I. Garcia2, Nadine Dijkstra3, Megan A. K. Peters2, Jorge Morales1

1: Northeastern University, United States of America; 2: University of California, Irvine, United States of America; 3: University College London, United Kingdom



True cases of Mind Blindness are More Difficult to Identify than Typically Thought: Revisiting Aphantasia Classification in a Large-Scale Study (N = 1,295)

Catherine Landry1, Audrey Lamy-Proulx1, Jasper van den Bosch2, Frédéric Gosselin1, Ian Charest1, Vincent Taschereau-Dumouchel1

1: Université de Montréal, Canada; 2: University of Leeds, England



Vividness Reports of Mental Imagery Correlate with Dimensionality of Imagery Representations in V1

Tiasha Saha Roy1, Jesse Breedlove2, Ghislain St-Yves1, Kendrick Kay1, Thomas Naselaris1

1: University of Minnesota, United States of America; 2: Maastricht University, Netherlands



MIRAGE: Robust Multi-modal Architectures Translate fMRI-to-image Models from Vision to Mental Imagery

Reese Kneeland1, Cesar Kadir Torrico Villanueva2, Tong Chen3, Jordyn Ojeda1, Shuhb Khanna4, Jonathan Xu5,6,2, Paul Scotti7,2,8, Thomas Naselaris1

1: University of Minnesota, United States of America; 2: Former Medical AI Research Center (MedARC); 3: University of Sydney; 4: Stanford University; 5: Alljoined; 6: University of Waterloo; 7: Former Stability AI; 8: Princeton Neuroscience Institute



An Inwardly Focused Cognitive Style Link Mental Imagery And Mental Health

Timo L. Kvamme1,2, Renate Rutiku3, Michal Wierzchon3,4, Inga Griskova-Bulanova5, Francesca Fardo2,6, Kristian Sandberg2, Juha Silvanto1

1: School of Psychology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, United Kingdom.; 2: Center for Functionally Integrative Neuroscience, Aarhus University, Denmark; 3: Consciousness Lab, Institute of Psychology, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland; 4: Centre for Brain Research, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland; 5: Life Sciences Centre, Institute of Biosciences, Vilnius University, Sauletekio ave 7, LT-10257 Vilnius, Lithuania; 6: Danish Pain Research Center, Aarhus University, Denmark



When Outliers Become Frontrunners: Mental Imagery Diversity and the Re-evaluation of Simulation Theories

Manuela Kirberg

Monash University, Australia



When Perception Shapes Reality: Insights From Face Pareidolia

Giorgia Parisi, Elisabetta Colombari, Chiara Mazzi, Sonia Mele, Silvia Savazzi

University of Verona, Italy



Absence Of Shared Representation In The Visual Cortex Challenges Unconscious Imagery in Aphantasia

Christian O. Scholz1, Jianghao Liu2

1: Institut für Philosophie II, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Universitätsstr. 150, 44801 Bochum, Germany; 2: Sorbonne Université, Institut du Cerveau – Paris Brain Institute – ICM, Inserm, CNRS, AP-HP, Hôpital de la Pitié-Salpêtrière, F-75013 Paris

4:30pm
-
5:30pm
Poster Session 4 - Unconscious processing, Artificial Intelligence, Philosophy & Theories - COFFEE BREAΚ
Location: FOYER
 

Non-invasive Electrical Stimulation Modulates Thalamocortical Connectivity During Mental Illusion

Seulgi Lee1, Bumhee Park1, Jeehye Seo2, Byoung-Kyong Min2

1: Ajou University School of Medicine, Republic of (South Korea); 2: Korea University, Korea, Republic of (South Korea)



Noise Modulation in a Single-Route Model Can Explain the Apparent Selective Effect of Prefrontal Damage on Conscious Visibility

Dimitri Bredikhin, Aaron Schurger

Chapman University, United States of America



Auditory Awareness of Errors in Self-produced Vocalization: An ERP Study

Sampo Tanskanen, Rada Wattanalurdphada, Roozbeh Behroozmand, Henry Railo

University of Turku, Finland



Unveiling The Electrocortical Correlates Of Subjective Duration Through The Magnitude-duration Illusion

Shiva Mahdian, Alexis Robin, Dominique Hoffmann, Lorella Minotti, Philippe Kahane, Nathan Faivre, Michael Pereira

Grenoble Institut des Neurosciences, France



Pareidolia in Visual Crowding

Bilge Sayim1, Olivia Koechli2, Natalia Melnik3

1: CNRS & École Normale Supérieure; 2: University of Bern; 3: Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg



The Role Of Visual Awareness In Size Coding

Simona Noviello1, Andrea Alamia2, Benedikt Zoefel2, Silvia Savazzi3, Gregor Thut2, Irene Sperandio1

1: University of Trento, Italy; 2: Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), France; 3: University of Verona, Italy



Manipulating Predictive Focus Facilitates Awareness of Quality in Coffee Tasting

Chiyu Maeda1,2, Toshimasa Yagi3,4,2, Satoshi Nishida2,1,5

1: Osaka University, Japan; 2: National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan; 3: ALTALENA Co. Ltd., Japan; 4: Value way Inc., Japan; 5: Hokkaido University, Japan



To Report Or Not To Report? Unravelling The Electrophysiological Markers Of Visual Awareness

Elisabetta Colombari, Nicola Ciavatti, Silvia Savazzi, Chiara Mazzi

University of Verona, Italy



Seeing Vs. Noticing: Revisiting Gradual Change Blindness

Itay Yaron1, Eylon Mizrai2, Liad Mudrik1,2

1: Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel; 2: School of Psychological Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel



Structure of Indescribable Textural Qualia in Vision

Suguru Wakita, Isamu Motoyoshi

The University of Tokyo, Japan



Investigating Perceptual Reality Monitoring Using Afterimage Perception

Cassandra M. Levesque1, Nadine Dijkstra2, Peter A. Bandettini1,3, Sharif I. Kronemer1

1: Laboratory of Brain and Cognition, National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), National Institutes of Health (NIH), USA; 2: Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, University of College London (UCL), Institute of Neurology, UK; 3: 3Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Core Facility, National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), National Institutes of Health (NIH), USA



Does V1 Preferentially Encode Conscious Perception?

Georgia Milne, Roni Maimon Mor, Kim Staeubli, John Greenwood, Peter Kok, Tessa Dekker

UCL, United Kingdom



Studying The Electrophysiological Dynamics Of Visual Consciousness Through A Partial Report Paradigm

Davide Bonfanti, Sonia Mele, Elena Bertacco, Chiara Mazzi, Silvia Savazzi

University of Verona, Italy



The Pulse: Role of Transient Subcortical Arousal Modulation in Visual, Auditory, Tactile and Gustatory Perceptual Awareness

Hal Blumenfeld, Aya Khalaf, Sharif Kronemer, Kate Christison-Lagay, Qilong Xin, Shanae Aarts, Maya Agdali, Taruna Yadav, Ayushe Sharma, Francois Stockart, Jiayin Qu

Yale School of Medicine, United States of America



State- And Hemifield-Dependent Modulation Of Orientation-Tuned Responses During Binocular Conflict In Mouse Visual Cortex

Mathis Bassler, Lilian Emming, Gerjan Huis in't Veld, Mototaka Suzuki, Cyriel Pennartz

University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands



Oscillatory Phase Alignment In Auditory Perception

Hassan Al-Turany1, Julio César Hechavarria1, Yuranny Cabral-Calderin2

1: Ernst Strüngmann Institute for Neuroscience, Germany; 2: Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Germany



Decoding Illusory Colours From Human Visual Cortex

Marek Nemecek1,2, Barbora Wolf2, Karl Gegenfurtner3, Philipp Sterzer4, Andreas Bartels5, Michael Bannert5, Matthias Guggenmos1

1: Health and Medical University Potsdam, Germany; 2: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany; 3: Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen, Germany; 4: Universität Basel, Switzerland; 5: Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen, Germany



The Neural Basis of Overflow: Decoding Category Information from Multi-object Visual Arrays

Karla Matić1,2, Issam Tafech1, Kai Görgen1, Rony Hirschhorn3, John-Dylan Haynes1,2

1: Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin, Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience, Berlin, Germany; 2: Max Planck School of Cognition, Leipzig, Germany; 3: Tel Aviv University, Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv, Israel



Brain-states Supporting Upcoming Visual Confidence Assessed from fMRI

Mariyana Cholakova, Afra Wohlschläger

Dept. of Neuroradiology, Klinikum rechts der Isar of the Technical University Munich, Germany



When Prediction Meets Perception: The Effect of Action-Based Expectations on Visual Perception

Axel Plantey--Veux1,2, Andrea Desantis1,3,4, Alexandre Zénon2

1: ONERA (French Aerospace Lab), Salon-De-Provence, France; 2: Institut de Neurosciences Cognitives et Intégratives d’Aquitaine (UMR 5287), CNRS, Université de Bordeaux, France; 3: Institut de Neurosciences de la Timone (UMR 7289), CNRS and Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille F-13005, France; 4: Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center (UMR 8002), CNRS and Université Paris Cité, Paris F-75006, France



Cognitive and Neural Factors Involved in the Perception of Real and Fake Information

Annabel Chen, Shuhan Wang, Tanisha Annamalai, Sarah Ayub

Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore



Keeping It Stable: Multisensory Integration In Object Size Constancy Across The Ventral And Dorsal Visual Streams

Chiara Mazzi1, Elena Franchin1, Anna Benamati1, Paola Cesari1, Irene Sperandio2, Sonia Mele1

1: University of Verona, Italy; 2: University of Trento, Italy



The Higher Order Structure Underlying Unconscious Vision

Davide Orsenigo1,2, Andrea Luppi3, Matteo Panormita1,4, Matteo Diano1, Hanna E. Willis5, Giovanni Petri2,6, Holly Bridge5, Marco Tamietto1,7

1: Dipartimento di Psicologia, Università degli Studi di Torino, Torino, Italy; 2: CENTAI Institute, Torino, Italy; 3: Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom; 4: Laboratory for Neuro- and Psychophysiology, Department of Neurosciences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; 5: Wellcome Trust Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neuroscience, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom; 6: Network Science Institute, Northeastern University London, London, United Kingdom; 7: Department of Medical and Clinical Psychology, Tilburg University, Tilburg, The Netherlands



Beauty and Consciousness: Aesthetic Judgments Predict Access and Dominance in Visual Awareness

Paolo Barbieri, Tommaso Ciorli, Greta Varesio, Jacopo Frascaroli, Lorenzo Pia, Irene Ronga

University of Turin, Italy



When Sparse Is Rich

Michael Herzog1, Grégoire Préchac1, Marco Bertamini2

1: EPFL, Switzerland; 2: University of Padova, Italy



Can non-conscious knowledge support instrumental conditioning? A Registered Report

Razvan Jurchis1, Andrei Costea1, Lina Skora2, Andrei Preda1

1: Babes-Bolyai University, Romania; 2: Heinrich Heine Universität, Germany



Is Conscious Perception Necessary to Direct Attention? A Replication of Jiang et al. (2006)

Syrus Yung-Jung Chen, Ryan B. Scott, Zoltan Dienes

University of Sussex, United Kingdom



A Computational Framework For Improved Goal Pursuit Through Reduced Conscious Control

Sucharit Katyal, Thor Grünbaum, Søren Kyllingsbæk

University of Copenhagen, Denmark



Addressing Methodological Challenges In Unconscious Process Research: A Hierarchical Modeling Approach

Ricardo Rey-Sáez1, Francisco Garre-Frutos2,3, Alicia Franco-Martínez1, Ignacio Castillejo1, Miguel Vadillo1

1: Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain; 2: University of Granada, Spain; 3: Mind, Brain and Behavior Research Center, Granada, Spain



Cross-Cultural Comparison Between Italy and Japan in Face Awareness Under the Breaking-Continuous Flash Suppression Paradigm

Mayuna Ishida1, Anna Lorenzoni3, Masaki Mori2, Mario Dalmaso3

1: Keio university, Japan; 2: Waseda university, Japan; 3: Padova university, Italy



Extending The Limits Of Unconscious Semantic Processing

Nitzan Micher, Dominique Lamy

Tel Aviv University, Israel



In The Hands Of Metacontrast: Investigating The Dual-Task Structure Of An Unconscious Priming Paradigm

Charlott Wendt, Guido Hesselmann

Psychologische Hochschule Berlin, Germany



Searching for the Best Subliminal Threshold Estimation Method: Empirical Validation of the STEP-Calibration Solution

Eden Elbaz, Itay Yaron, Liad Mudrik

Tel Aviv University, Israel



Studying unconscious processing: Contention and consensus

François Stockart1, Maor Schreiber2, Nathan Faivre1, Liad Mudrik2,3

1: Univ. Grenoble Alpes, France; 2: Tel Aviv University, Israel; 3: Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Canada



Future Science and Artificial Consciousness

Leonard Dung

Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany



Dissociating Artificial Intelligence From Artificial Consciousness

William Marshall1,2, Graham Findlay2, Larissa Albantakis2, Isaac David2, William GP Mayner2, Christof Koch3, Guilio Tononi2

1: Brock University, Canada; 2: University of Wisconsin - Madison, USA; 3: Allen Institute, USA



The Two-Factor Framework And AI Consciousness

Lukas Kob

OVGU Magdeburg, Germany



Valence & Value: Towards an Affect Profile for Dimensional AI Consciousness

Dvija Mehta1,2

1: University of Cambridge; 2: Reminiscence Pvt Ltd



PCM-LLMs: Bridging Non-Verbal Consciousness Modeling and Language Processing to Make Intelligent Social Virtual Agents Closer to Human Beings

Tonglin YAN1,2, Grégoire Sergeant-Perthuis3,4, Nils Ruet1,2, Kenneth Williford5, David Rudrauf1,2

1: CIAMS, Université Paris-Saclay, France; 2: CIAMS, Université d'Orléans, France; 3: LCQB, Sorbonne Universitén, France; 4: OURAGAN team, Inria Paris Paris, France; 5: Department of Philosophy and Humanities, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX, United States,



Thinking Machines or Thinking Minds? Neural Responses to Beliefs About Conversational Partners

Rachel Charlotte Metzgar, Isaac Ray Christian, Michael Graziano

Princeton University, United States of America



Emergent Meta-Cognition in Language Models: Unpacking the Origins of Machine 'Aha!' Moments

Bartosz Michał Radomski1, Jakub Fil2

1: Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany; 2: WAIYS GmbH



Easy and Hard Problems in Machine Consciousness and an Approach for the Hard One

Ouri E. Wolfson1,2

1: University of Illinois Chicago, United States of America; 2: Pirouette Software, Inc.



Can LLMs Make Trade-Offs Involving Stipulated Pain and Pleasure States?

Geoff Keeling1, Winnie Street1, Martyna Stachaczyk2, Daria Zakharova2, Iulia M. Comsa3, Anastasiya Sakovych2, Isabella Logothesis2, Zejia Zhang2, Blaise Agüera y Arcas1, Jonathan Birch2

1: Google, Paradigms of Intelligence Team; 2: London School of Economics, United Kingdom; 3: Google DeepMind



Can LLMs Simulate Subjective Human Experience?

Christopher Maymon, Gina Grimshaw, David Carmel

Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, New Zealand



Do We Find AI-Generated Less Emotional? The Impact Of Reality Beliefs On Affective Responses For Negative And Positive Emotions

Ana Sofia Neves

University of Sussex, United Kingdom



Consciousness in the Creative Process and the Problem for AI

Joachim Nicolodi

University of Cambridge, United Kingdom



Can “AI” Really Be Considered “Conscious” Under Illusionism?

Nicolas Loerbroks

Ruhr University Bochum, Germany



Implications of Analog/Non-Analog distinction for AI Consciousness

Jordi Galiano-Landeira

Centro Internacional de Neurociencia y Ética (CINET), Madrid 28010, Spain



Could AI be Conscious? Insights from a Wittgensteinan Perspective

Olegas Algirdas Tiuninas

Charles University of Prague, Czech Republic



Can the Science of Consciousness Reach a Consensus on the Problem of Artificial Consciousness?

Wanja Wiese

Ruhr University Bochum, Germany



Resistance to Artificial Consciousness and Its Epistemic Consequences

Renee Ye

Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB), Germany



What AI Not Being Conscious (Yet) Can Tell Us About Human Consciousness

Asger Kirkeby-Hinrup, Jakob Stenseke

Lund University, Sweden



Reality Monitoring in Human Minds and Machines

Brian Odegaard, Saurabh Ranjan

University of Florida, United States of America



Mapping the Landscape of Integrated Information Theory: A Bibliometric Analysis Across Dimensions

Joanna Szczotka1, Niccolò Negro2, Fernando Rosas3,4,5, Renzo Comolatti1

1: Center for Sleep and Consciousness, University of Wisconsin-Madison; 2: School of Psychological Sciences, Tel Aviv University; 3: Sussex Centre for Consciousness Science and Sussex AI, Department of Informatics, University of Sussex; 4: Center for Psychedelic Research and Centre for Complexity Science, Department of Brain Science, Imperial College London; 5: Centre for Eudaimonia and Human Flourishing, University of Oxford



The Relativistic Theory of Consciousness – a New Testable Solution for the Hard Problem

Nir Lahav

Cambridge university, England



Assessment vs. Attribution of Consciousness in AI

Tobias Schlicht

Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany



Common-causes and Independent Mechanisms Pose a Problem for the Iterative Natural Kind and the Theory-light Approaches

Peter Fazekas

Aarhus University, Denmark



Higher-Level Cognition and Life-Mind Continuity: Structuralism, Grounded Cognition, and Predictive Processing

Jannis Friedrich1, Martin H. Fischer2

1: German Sport University Cologne, Germany; 2: Potsdam Embodied Cognition Group, University of Potsdam



On the Utility of Toy Models for Theories of Consciousness

Larissa Albantakis

University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States of America



The Self Organising Mind - Conscious Emergence through Entropy and Homeostatic Principles

Anastasia Drikakis, Stavroula Tsinorema

University of Crete



Infants' Perception and the Cognitive Approach to Consciousness

Zhang Chen

Fudan University, China, People's Republic of



The Phenomenal Binding Problem: How Neural Networks Can Address this Constraint on Theories of Consciousness

Chris Percy1,2, Andrés Gómez-Emilsson2

1: University of Derby, United Kingdom; 2: Qualia Research Institute, San Francisco, CA, United States



Brain Activity and Synchronization in Conscious Perception: Insights from Cogitate Experiment 2

Xuan Cui1, Matthias Ekman2, Ling Liu9,17, Oscar Ferrante7, Aya Khalaf3, David Richter4,5,6, Yamil Vidal4, Ole Jensen1,7,8, Huan Luo9, Floris P de Lange2, Hal Blumenfeld3, Lucia Melloni10,11,12, Michael Pitts13, Liad Mudrik14,15, Cogitate Consortium16

1: Department of Psychiatry, Oxford University, Oxford OX3 7JX, U.K.; 2: Radboud Universiteit, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Kapittelweg 29, 6525 EN NIJMEGEN; 3: Department of Neurology, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA; 4: Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, 6500 HB, the Netherlands; 5: Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1081 BT, the Netherlands; 6: Institute for Brain and Behavior Amsterdam (iBBA), Amsterdam, 1081 BT, the Netherlands; 7: Centre for Human Brain Health, School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, U.K.; 8: Department of Experimental Psychology, Oxford University, Oxford OX2 6GG, U.K.; 9: School of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, 100871, China; 10: Department of Neurology, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY, 10016, USA; 11: Neural Circuits, Consciousness and Cognition Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, 60322, Germany; 12: RUHR-Universität Bochum, Universitätsstraße 150, 44801 Bochum; 13: Psychology Department, Reed College, Portland, OR, 97202, USA; 14: Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 6997801, Israel; 15: School of Psychological Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel; 16: Funder: Templeton World Charity Foundation; 17: School of Communication Science, Beijing Language and Culture University, Beijing, 100083, China



The Structural Relevance of Predictions in Testing Theories of Consciousness

Niccolo Negro

Tel Aviv University, Israel



Neural Decoding of Conscious vs. Unconscious Visual Stimuli: Testing the Global Neuronal Workspace and Integrated Information Theories

Ling Liu1,2, Zvi Roth3, Oscar Ferrante4, Aya Khalaf5, David Richter6,7,8, Yamil Vidal6, Ole Jensen9,4, Huan Luo2, Floris P de Lange10, Hal Blumenfeld5, Lucia Melloni11,12,13, Michael Pitts14, Liad Mudrik15,16

1: Cognitive Science and Allied Health School, Beijing Language and Culture University, Beijing, 100083,China,; 2: School of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, 100871, China; 3: School of Psychological Sciences at Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel; 4: Centre for Human Brain Health, School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK; 5: Department of Neurology, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA; 6: Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, 6500 HB, the Netherlands; 7: Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1081 BT, the Netherlands; 8: Institute for Brain and Behavior Amsterdam (iBBA), Amsterdam, 1081 BT, the Netherlands; 9: University of Oxford, Oxford OX2 6GG, UK; 10: Radboud Universiteit, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Kapittelweg 29, 6525 EN NIJMEGEN; 11: Department of Neurology, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY, 10016, USA; 12: Neural Circuits, Consciousness and Cognition Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, 60322, Germany; 13: RUHR-Universität Bochum, Universitätsstraße 150, 44801 Bochum; 14: Psychology Department, Reed College, Portland, OR, 97202, USA; 15: Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 6997801, Israel; 16: School of Psychological Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel



Spinozan Belief Procedure and the Illusion Meta-Problem

Artem Besedin

Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russian Federation



Testing the Global Neuronal Workspace and Integrated Information Theory via adversarial collaboration: introducing Cogitate’s Experiment 2

Cogitate Consortium1, Rony Hirschhorn1, Lucia Melloni2,3,4, Michael Pitts5, Liad Mudrik1

1: Tel Aviv University, Israel; 2: RUHR-Universität Bochum, Germany; 3: New York University, USA; 4: Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Germany; 5: Reed College, USA



Testing Integrated Information Theory predictions by assessing representational similarity in brain activity

Pablo Oyarzo1, Zvi Roth2, Oscar Ferrante11, Aya Khalaf3, Ling Liu6, David Richter4,10, Yamil Vidal4, Ole Jensen5,11, Huan Luo6, Floris P de Lange4, Hal Blumenfeld3, Lucia Melloni7,8, Michael Pitts9, Liad Mudrik2, Cogitate Consortium8

1: Freie Universität Berlin, Germany; 2: Tel Aviv University, Israel; 3: Yale School of Medicine, USA; 4: Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands; 5: University of Oxford, UK; 6: Peking University, China; 7: New York University, USA; 8: Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Germany; 9: Reed College, USA; 10: Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands; 11: University of Birmingham, UK

Date: Wednesday, 09/July/2025
8:30am
-
9:00am
REGISTRATIONS
Location: FOYER
10:00am
-
10:30am
COFFEE BREAK
Location: FOYER
12:30pm
-
1:30pm
Poster Session 5- States of Consciousness, Models & Mechanisms - LUNCH BREAK
Location: FOYER
 

EEG Bifurcation Dynamics Around Visual Detection Threshold in No-Report

Max Opitz1, Angelica Maria Nicolacoudis1, Michael Cohen2,3, Michael Pitts1

1: Reed College, United States of America; 2: Department of Psychology and Program in Neuroscience, Amherst College; 3: McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology



Identification of Cortical Up and Down States with Recurrent Quantification Analysis

Amin Samipour1, Leonardo Dalla Porta1, Maria Victoria Sanchez-Vives1,2

1: IDIBAPS, Barcelona, Spain; 2: ICREA, Barcelona, Spain



Real-Time and Offline Machine-Learning-Based Methods to Explore the Role of Consciousness in Action Formation Using Intracranial Human Recordings

Alejandro de Miguel Gomez1, Ceci Verbaarschot2, Robert A. Gaunt2, Jennifer L. Collinger2, Aaron Schurger1, Uri Maoz1

1: Chapman University, CA, USA; 2: University of Pittsburgh, PA, USA



A Theoretical Model of Consciousness - from Sensory input to Behavioral Output

Ege Sayginer, Tugba Ozcan

Middle East Technical University



Different Sensitivity of Complexity Measures to Network Integration and Segregation

Gianluca Gaglioti1, Thierry Nieus1, Anna Cattani2, Davide Momi3,4, Renzo Comolatti1,5, Marcello Massimini1,6, Simone Sarasso1

1: University of Milan; 2: Boston University; 3: Centre for Addiction and Mental Health; 4: Stanford University Medical Center; 5: University of Wisconsin–Madison; 6: Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi



Investigating Neuromodulatory Imprint on Brain Activity by Phasic Firing Events of the Cholinergic Basal Forebrain Through Changes in fMRI Activity of Associated Brain Areas Using the REACT Toolbox

Nadja Schaller1, Juliana Zimmermann2, Rachel Nuttall2, Afra Wohlschläger1

1: Dept. of Neuroradiology, Klinikum rechts der Isar of the Technical University Munich, Germany; 2: Dept. of Anesthesiology, Klinikum rechts der Isar of the Technical University Munich, Germany



Observational vs Perturbational Measures of Brain Complexity: The Effects of Ongoing EEG Oscillations

Elena Focacci1, Gabriel Hassan1, Gianluca Gaglioti1, Giulia Furregoni2, Letizia Bernardelli2, Silvia Casarotto1,3, Marcello Massimini1,3

1: University of Milan, Italy; 2: University of Camerino, Italy; 3: IRCCS Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi, Milan, Italy



Neurophysiological Effects of Cholinesterase-Inhibiting Pesticides on Alertness and Drowsiness: Resting-State EEG Evidence from an Exposed Population

Boris Lucero1, Maria Teresa Muñoz-Quezada2, Andres Canales-Johnson1,3, Tristan Bekinschtein3

1: CINPSI NEUROCOG, UNIVERSIDAD CATOLICA DEL MAULE, CHILE; 2: SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, UNIVERSIDAD DE CHILE; 3: CONSCIOUSNESS AND COGNITION LAB, UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE, CAMBRIDGE, UK



Exploring the Neural Dynamics of Conscious Processing from Wakefulness to Sleep

Başak Türker1, Delphine Oudiette2, Thomas Andrillon2, Isabelle Arnulf2, Claire Sergent1

1: Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center; 2: Paris Brain Institute



Task-Dependent Modulation of Synergistic Interaction in a Large fMRI Dataset Indicates Connections Between Consciousness and Cognition

James Knight1, Pedro A. M. Mediano2,3, Daniel Bor1,4

1: Queen Mary University of London; 2: Imperial College London; 3: University College London; 4: University of Cambridge



Informational Complexity as a Neural Marker of Cognitive Reserve

Laura Stolp1, Kanad N Mandke1, Pedro AM Mediano2, Helena M Gellersen1,3, Alex Swartz4, Katarzyna Rudzka5, Jon Simons1, Tristan A Bekinschtein1, Daniel Bor1,6

1: University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; 2: Imperial College London, United Kingdom; 3: German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Germany; 4: University of Sussex, United Kingdom; 5: University College London, United Kingdom; 6: Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom



Understanding Long-Term Subjective Effects Of Serotonergic Interventions: A Machine Learning Approach

Hanna M. Tolle1, Andrea I Luppi2,3, Pedro A. M. Mediano1

1: Imperial College London, United Kingdom; 2: University of Oxford, United Kingdom; 3: University of Cambridge, United Kingdom



Exploring the Edge of Stability: A Markov Blanket Simulation of Certainty and Entropy

Cagatay Demirel1, Livia Regus2

1: Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition, and Behaviour, Netherlands, The; 2: Department of Social, Health and Organizational Psychology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, Heidelberglaan 1, 3584 CS, Netherlands



Bifurcations in Neural Dynamics: A Dynamical Systems Approach to Conscious Access

Thomas Valentin Hardy, Claire Sergent

INCC CNRS UMR8002, Université Paris-Cité, France



Using Classification from Report to No-report Trials to Reveal Neural Correlates of Consciousness

Gennadiy Belonosov1, Oscar Ferrante2, Ling Liu3,4, Rony Hirschhorn1, Ole Jensen2,5, Huan Lou3, Lucia Melloni6,7,8, Liad Mudrik1,9, Michael Pitts10

1: Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 6997801, Israel; 2: Centre for Human Brain Health, School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK; 3: School of Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, 100871, China; 4: School of Communication Science, Beijing Language and Culture University, Beijing, 100083, China; 5: University of Oxford, Oxford OX2 6GG, UK; 6: Department of Neurology, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY, 10016, USA; 7: Neural Circuits, Consciousness and Cognition Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, 60322, Germany; 8: RUHR-Universität Bochum, Universitätsstraße 150, 44801 Bochum; 9: School of Psychological Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel; 10: Psychology Department, Reed College, Portland, OR, 97202, USA



Reconciling Phenomenal And Access Consciousness Through Evidence Accumulation

Nathan Faivre1, Liad Mudrik2, Michael Pitts3, Aaron Schurger4

1: CNRS; 2: TAU; 3: Reed College; 4: Chapman University



Inducing Dreaming During Anesthesia: A Novel EEG-Guided Experimental Protocol

Pilleriin Sikka1,2,3, Ben Deverett1, Boris Heifets1,4

1: Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, School of Medicine, Stanford University, USA; 2: Department of Cognitive Neuroscience and Philosophy, School of Bioscience, University of Skövde, Sweden; 3: Department of Psychology, University of Turku, Turku, Finland; 4: Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine, Stanford University, USA



Nitrous Oxide As An Experimental Model Of Dissociation

Devin B. Terhune

King's College London, United Kingdom



A Case Of Ketamine-Induced Near-Death Experience: Memory Content Evolution Over Time And Lasting Effects

Pauline Fritz1,2, Aurore Ancion1,3, Naji Alnagger1,2, Nicolas Lejeune1,2, Anaïs Rourre1, Alexandre Ghuysen3, Olivia Gosseries1,2, Charlotte Martial1,2

1: Coma Science Group, GIGA-Consciousness, GIGA-Neuroscience, University of Liege, Liege, Belgium; 2: NeuroRehab & Consciousness Clinic, Neurology Department , University Hospital of Liège; 3: Department of Emergency, University Hospital of Liège, Liège, Belgium



A Model of Different States of Consciousness Linking Receptor Scale to Whole-brain Scale

Maria Sacha, Federico Tesler, Rodrigo Cofre, Alain Destexhe

CNRS, Paris-Saclay University, France



Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation Modulates Primate Brain Dynamics Across States Of Consciousness

Guylaine Hoffner1, Pablo Castro1,2, Lynn Uhrig1,3, Camilo Miguel Signorelli4,5,6, Morgan Dupont1, Jordy Tasserie7, Alain Destexhe2, Rodrigo Cofre2,8, Jacobo Sitt9, Bechir Jarraya1,10

1: U992 Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit, CEA, INSERM, Université Paris-Saclay, NeuroSpin Center, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France; 2: Institute of Neuroscience (NeuroPSI), Paris-Saclay University, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), 91191, Gif-sur-Yvette, France; 3: Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, Necker Hospital, AP-HP, Université de Paris Cité, 75015, Paris, France; 4: Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford, Oxford, 7 Parks Rd, Oxford OUX1 3QG; 5: Laboratory of Neurophysiology and Movement Biomechanics (LNMB), Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Route de Lennik 808, CP 640, Building N, campus Erasme, 1070 Brussels; 6: Center for Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence, University of Copenhagen, Karen Blixens Plads 8, Copenhagen 2300, Denmark.; 7: Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics, Department of Neurology, Brigham & Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA; 8: Laboratoire de Physique de l’École Normale Supérieure, CNRS, PSL University, Sorbonne Université and Université Paris Cité, 75005 Paris, France; 9: Sorbonne Université, Institut du Cerveau - Paris Brain Institute - ICM, Inserm, CNRS, Paris 75013, France; 10: Department of Neurology, Hopital Foch, 92150, Suresnes, France



Hemodynamic Alterations To Propofol, Ketamine And LSD And The Effect On Neurotransmitter Associated Functional Connectivity

Jitka Annen1,2, Naji L.N. Alnagger2, Guorong Wu3, Vincent Bonhomme4,5, Robin Carhat-Harris7, Leor Roseman8, Gang Chen6, Daniele Marinazzo1

1: Department of Data Analysis, University of Ghent, Ghent, Belgium; 2: Coma Science Group, GIGA-Consciousness, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 3: Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality, Faculty of Psychology, Southwest University, Chongqing, China; 4: Anesthesia and Perioperative Neuroscience, GIGA-Consciousness, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 5: Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 6: Scientific and Statistical Computing Core, National Institute of Mental Health, USA; 7: Neurology, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California San Francisco; 8: Department of Psychology Huxley Foundation Fellow in Psychedelic Research, University of Exeter



Complex Auditory Regularity Processing in Comatose Patients after Cardiac Arrest

Andria Pelentritou1, Jacinthe Cataldi1, Frederic Zubler2, Manuela Iten3, Matthias Haenggi4, Nawfel Ben-Hamouda5, Andrea Rossetti6, Athina Tzovara7,8, Marzia De Lucia1,9

1: Brain-Body and Consciousness Laboratory, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV) & University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; 2: Department of Neurology, Spitalzentrum Biel, University of Bern, Biel, Switzerland; 3: Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Inselspital, Bern University Hospital, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland; 4: Institute of Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; 5: Department of Adult Intensive Care Medicine, Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV) & University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; 6: Department of Neurology, Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV) & University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; 7: Institute of Computer Science, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland; 8: Center for Experimental Neurology, Department of Neurology, Bern University Hospital (Inselspital), Bern, Switzerland; 9: Centre for Biomedical Imaging (CIBM), Lausanne, Switzerland



Critical Brain Dynamics and Prognosis in Disorders of Consciousness Through Personalized Connectome

Ivan Mindlin1, Romain Delsanti1, Ruben Herzog1, Adrian Ponce-Alvarez2,3, Jacobo Diego Sitt1, Yonatan Sanz Perl3

1: Paris Brain Institute, France; 2: Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Spain; 3: Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain



Exploring Olfactory Stimuli Responses as Neural Markers of Consciousness in DoC Patients: an fMRI Study

Maria Sourdi, Alisa Kiker

University of Vienna/ Medical University of Vienna, Austria



A Case-report of a Patient in a Minimally Conscious State Receiving Psilocybin as a Potential Novel Treatment

Paolo Cardone1,2, Pablo Núñez1,2, Anaïs Elodie Gillet1, Naji Alnagger1,2, Charlotte Martial1,2, Glenn Van der Lande1,2, Robin Sandell3, Robin Carhart-Harris4,5, Olivia Gosseries1,2

1: Coma Science Group, GIGA-Consciousness, GIGA-Neuroscience, University of Liège, Belgium; 2: NeuroRehab & Consciousness Clinic, Neurology Department, University Hospital of Liège, Belgium; 3: Staff Research Associate at the University of California San Francisco, California, USA; 4: Centre for Psychedelic Research, Department of Brain Sciences, Imperial College London, UK; 5: Carhart-Harris Lab, Dept. of Neurology, University of California San Francisco, California, USA



Breathing as a Window into Consciousness in Disorders of Consciousness Patients

Anat Arz

Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel



Neuropsychological, Electrophysiological, and Phenomenological Signatures of Zolpidem: A Pilot Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Randomized Clinical Trial

Fatemeh Seyfzadeh1,2,3, Michiel Meys1,2,3, Pauline Fritz1,2, Mélanie Louras2,3, Nicolas Lejeune1,2,4, Aurore Thibaut1,2,3, Vincent Bonhomme5,6,7, Olivia Gosseries1,2

1: Coma Science Group, GIGA-Consciousness, GIGA-Neuroscience, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 2: NeuroRehab & Consciousness Clinic, Neurology Department, University Hospital of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 3: NeuroRecovery Lab, GIGA-Consciousness, GIGA-Neuroscience, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 4: GIGA-CRC human imaging, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 5: Interdisciplinary Algology Center, University Hospital of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 6: Anesthesia and Perioperative Neuroscience Laboratory, GIGA-Consciousness, GIGA-Neuroscience, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 7: Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital of Liège, Liège, Belgium



Establishing Feasibility For Measuring Multi-unit Activity Within Ictal Period Of Seizures With Preserved Vs Impaired Consciousness.

Urszula Gorska-Klimowska1, Beril Mat1, Dillon Scott2, Brinda Sevak2,3, Colin Denis2,4, Csaba Kozma2,5, Mariel Kalkach-Aparicio2,6, Aaron Suminski7, Aaron Struck2, Giulio Tononi1, Melanie Boly1,2, Wendell Lake7

1: Department of Psychiatry, University of Wisconsin - Madison; 2: Department of Neurology, University of Wisconsin - Madison; 3: Biomedical Engineering Graduate Group, UC Davis (current); 4: Department of Mathematics, The University of Utah (current); 5: Computational Neurology, Neuroscience & Psychiatry Lab, Newcastle University (current); 6: University of South Dacota, Sanford Health (current); 7: Department of Neurosurgery, University of Wisconsin - Madison, * first two authors co-first; # last two authors co-last.



Cortical Metabolic Changes in Disorders of Consciousness Follow Canonical Functional Gradients

Niall W. Duncan, Elizaveta Baranova, Timothy J. Lane

Taipei Medical University, Taiwan



Quantitative EEG and Machine Learning for Prognostic Evaluation in Pediatric Disorders of Consciousness: a Novel Approach Using Complexity and Spectral Measures

Jacopo Favaro1, Francesco Colussi2, Edoardo Passarotto3, Claudio Ancona1, Stefano Sartori1, Giorgio Perilongo1, Giovanni Sparacino2, Maria Rubega3, Irene Toldo1

1: Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, University of Padova, Italy; 2: Department of Information Engineering, University of Padova, Italy; 3: Department of Neuroscience, University of Padova, Italy



Preliminary Results on Outcome Prediction in Disorders of Consciousness After Hypoxic-Ischemic Brain Injury Using Advanced MRI Metrics

Daniel Tchemerinsky Konieczny1, John Bro-Jeppesen2, Christian Juhl Terkelsen2, Kristian Sandberg1

1: Center of Functionally Integrative Neuroscience, Aarhus University, Denmark; 2: Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Denmark



Closed-loop Application Of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) For Patients With Chronic Minimally Conscious State

Géraldine Martens1, Alice Barra2,3, Pablo Núñez Novo3, David Ibáñez-Soria4, Eleni Kroupi4, Aureli Soria-Frisch4, Andrea Piarulli5, Olivia Gosseries3, Nicolas Lejeune3,6, Ricardo Salvador4, Karan Chugani4, Michael A Nitsche7,8, Steven Laureys3, Giulio Ruffini4, Aurore Thibaut1

1: NeuroRecovery Lab, GIGA-Consciousness, University of Liège, Belgium; 2: IRENEA – Instituto de Rehabilitación Neurológica, Fundación Hospitales Vithas, València, Spain; 3: Coma Science Group, GIGA-Consciousness, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 4: Starlab Barcelona SL, Barcelona, Spain; 5: Department of Surgical, Medical, Molecular and Critical Area Pathology, University of Pisa, Italy; 6: Clinique de la Conscience et de NeuroRevalidation; 7: Dept. Psychology and Neurosciences, Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors, Dortmund, Germany; 8: Department of Neurology, University Medical Hospital Bergmannsheil, Bochum, Germany



Auditory Neural Synchronization And Consciousness: EEG Study With Binaural Beats

Joana Sayal1, Alexandre Celma-Miralles2, Boris Kleber2, Óscar F. Gonçalves3

1: CINEICC, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Coimbra, Portugal; 2: Center for Music in the Brain, Dept. of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University & R.A.M.A, Denmark; 3: Brainloop Laboratory, CINTESIS@RISE, CINTESIS.UPT, Universidade Portucalense Infante D. Henrique, Portugal



Linking Brain Activity to Consciousness in a Case of Severe Prefrontal Injury: A Case Study and Control Group Comparison

Elizaveta Baranova, Timothy J. Lane, Niall W. Duncan

Taipei Medical University, Taiwan



Multimodal and Dynamical Assessment in Disorders of Consciousness: An Approach Integrating Computer Vision, EEG, and ECG.

Bruno Michelot1, Alexandra Corneyllie1, Stefan Duffner2, Fabien Perrin1

1: Centre de Recherche en Neurosciences de Lyon (CRNL), Bron, France; 2: Laboratoire d'InfoRmatique en Image et Systèmes d'information (LIRIS), Villeurbanne, France



Autoregressive Modelling for State Prediction in Disorders of Consciousness

Andrei Ciuparu1, Samuel Dolean1, Laouen Belloli3, Ivan Mindlin2, Jacobo Sitt2, Raul Muresan1

1: Transylvanian Institute of Neuroscience (TINS), Romania; 2: Paris Brain Institute (ICM), France; 3: Universidad de Buenos Aires, Brazil



Automatic Segmentation Of Brain Lesions Leading To Disorders Of Consciousness

Clémence Bobichon1,2, Maude Beaudoin-Gobert2, Carole Lartizien3, Nicolas Costes3, Inès Mérida3, Jacques Luauté1,4, Florent Gobert1,4

1: Univ. Grenoble Alpes , Fonds de dotation Clinatec, Grenoble, France; 2: Centre de Recherche en Neurosciences de Lyon, Bron, France; 3: CERMEP – Imagerie du Vivant, Bron, France; 4: Hospices Civils de Lyon, Bron, France



EEG Dynamic Regimes and the Contributions of Regional Glucose Uptake in a Large Cohort of Patients With Prolonged Disorders of Consciousness

Glenn J.M. van der Lande1, Michiel Meys1,2,3, Nicolas Lejeune1,2, Olivia Gosseries1,2, Aurore Thibaut1,2,3, Gang Chen4, Mary M. Conte5, Nicholas D. Schiff5, Steven Laureys1,6, Daniele Marinazzo7, Jitka Annen1,2,7

1: Coma Science Group, GIGA-Consciousness, GIGA-Neuroscience, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 2: NeuroRehab & Consciousness Clinic, Neurology Department, University Hospital of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 3: NeuroRecovery Lab, GIGA-Consciousness, GIGA-Neuroscience, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium; 4: Scientific and Statistical Computing Core, National Institute of Mental Health, USA; 5: Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA; 6: Joint International Research Unit on Consciousness, CERVO Brain Research Centre, Laval University, Québec, Canada; 7: Department of Data Analysis, University of Ghent, Ghent, Belgium



Can fMRI Inform Prognostication Of Prolonged Disorders Of Consciousness? Very Long Term Follow Up Of A Research Cohort (N=72)

Judith Allanson1,2, Ashraff Ali2, Evelyn Kamau3, Emmanuel Stamatakis1, David Menon1, Stephen Barclay4, John Pickard3

1: Division of Anaesthetics, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; 2: Royal Hospital for Neurodisability, Putney, London; 3: Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Cambridge; 4: Department of Public health and Primary care, University of Cambridge



Disentangling Information Integration And Awareness In Disorders Of Consciousness And Delirium: An EEG Connectivity Study

Vera Blanchys1, Alexandra Corneyllie1, Clémence Bobichon1, Florent Gobert1, Maude Beaudoin1, Marzia De Lucia2, Stein Silva3, Fabrice Ferré1, Fabien Perrin1

1: CAP Team, Lyon Neuroscience Research Centre, Bron, France; 2: Laboratoire de recherche en neuroimagerie, Lausanne, Switzerland; 3: ToNIC Lab - University Hospital, Toulouse, France



Establishing fNIRS-Based Hemodynamic Patterns: A Baseline for Applications in Disorders of Consciousness

Lauren H. Furtick1, Martin M. Monti2, Holli A. DeVon1, Mary-Lynn Brecht1, Julia C. Ponce1, Paul M. Macey1

1: UCLA School of Nursing, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States; 2: Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States



Towards Targeted Thalamic Ultrasound Interventions in Disorders of Consciousness

Daniel Torbett-Schofield1,2, Benjamin Griffiths1,2, Sang-Hoon Yeo2,3, Joseph Galea1,2, Davinia Fernandez-Espejo1,2

1: School of Psychology, University of Birmingham; 2: Centre for Human Brain Health, University of Birmingham; 3: School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham



Caught Between Sleep and Wake: Electrophysiological Insights of Changes in Conscious Experiences in Hypersomnia

Arthur Le Coz1,2, Raphael Vollhardt2, Marie Degrave1, Smaranda Leu-Semenescu2, Pauline Dodet1,2, Ana Gales2, Delphine Oudiette1,2, Isabelle Arnulf1,2, Thomas Andrillon1,2

1: Sorbonne Université, Institut du Cerveau - Paris Brain Institute - ICM, Inserm, CNRS, APHP, Hôpital de la Pitié Salpêtrière, Paris, France.; 2: Sorbonne Université, Institut du Cerveau - Paris Brain Institute - ICM, Inserm, CNRS, AP-HP, Hôpital de la Pitié Salpêtrière, DMU APPROCHES, Paris, France



Levels of Dreaming: A Multilevel Framework Approach

Simone Anthes

Osnabrück University, Germany



Experimentally Altering Dream Content in REM Sleep to Promote Creative Problem-Solving

Karen Rose Konkoly1, Daniel Morris1, Kaitlyn Hurka1, Kristin Sanders2, Ken Paller1

1: Northwestern University, United States of America; 2: University of Notre Dame, United States of America



Expectation and Surprise in the Sleeping Brain: Auditory Omission Prediction Error Response in NREM and REM Sleep

Sharon Yakim1,3,4, Christine Blume5, Tristan Bekinschtein2, Anat Arzi3,4

1: Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Science, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel; 2: Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EB, UK; 3: Department of Medical Neurobiology & Institute for Medical Research Israel-Canada, Faculty of Medicine, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel; 4: Department of Cognitive and Brain Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel; 5: Centre for Chronobiology, Psychiatric Hospital of the University of Basel. Research Platform Molecular and Cognitive Neurosciences, University of Basel. Department of Biomedicine, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.



Investigating the Relation Between Consciousness Experience and Attentional Capture.

Nadav Itzhak Weisler, Ran Hassin

The Hebrew University, Israel



Melodies In Slumber: Neural Decoding Of Musical Expectations In Human Sleep

Michelle George1, Cagatay Demirel2, Marc Schwartz-Pallejà3,4, Ugur Can Akkaya5, Miriam Akkermann5,6, Dirk Pflüger7, Martin Dresler2, Thomas Andrillon1,8

1: Paris Brain Institute, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France; 2: Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, the Netherlands; 3: Center for Brain and Cognition, Computational Neuroscience Group, Department of Information and Communication Technologies, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain; 4: Eurecat,Technology Center of Catalonia, Multimedia Technologies, Barcelona, Spain; 5: Institute of Arts and Music, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany; 6: Ernst-von-Siemens Stiftungsprofessur for New Music, Institute for Theatre Studies, Freie Universität Berlin; 7: Scientific Computing Group, Institute for Parallel and Distributed Systems, University of Stuttgart, Germany; 8: Monash Centre for Consciousness and Contemplative Studies, Faculty of Arts, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia



A Call for Research on Lucid Dreaming and Dream Control

Clarita Bonamino1, Emma Peters2

1: Queensland University of Technology, Australia; 2: Bern University, Switzerland



Decoding the Neural Correlates of Dream Recall from Sleep EEG Using Machine Learning

Arthur Dehgan1,2, Anirudh Kemtur1,2, Arna Gosh2, Tarek Lajnef1, Raphael Vallat3, Jean-Baptiste Eichenlaub4, Perrine Ruby5, Irina Rish2, Karim Jerbi1,2,6

1: CoCo Lab, Psychology Department, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Quebec, Canada; 2: MILA (Quebec AI Institute), Montreal, Quebec, Canada; 3: Center for Human Sleep Science at UC Berkeley, California, USA; 4: Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Univ. Savoie Mont Blanc, CNRS, LPNC, 38000 Grenoble, France & Institut Universitaire de France (IUF); 5: Perception Attention Mémoire (PAM), Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Université de Lyon, Lyon, France; 6: UNIQUE Center (Quebec Neuro-AI Research Center), Montréal, Quebec, Canada



Tired, Weary or just Sleepy? Sleep-Like Intrusions in Wakefulness as a Unifying Mechanism of Mental Fatigue

Thomas Andrillon1,2

1: Sorbonne University, Paris Brain Institute, Inserm, CNRS, APHP, France; 2: Centre for Consciousness and Contemplative Studies, Monash University, Australia



Does Waking Frontal Alpha Asymmetry (FAA) Predict Affective Experiences in Home Dreams?

Enyu Lin1, Nanna Strid1,2, Simone Grassini3,4, Henry Railo1, Antti Revonsuo1,2, Pilleriin Sikka1,2,5,6

1: Department of Psychology and Speech-Language Pathology, University of Turku, Finland; 2: Department of Cognitive Neuroscience and Philosophy, University of Skövde, Sweden; 3: Department of Psychosocial Science, University of Bergen, Norway; 4: Cognitive and Behavioral Neuroscience Laboratory, University of Stavanger, Norway; 5: Department of Psychology, Stanford University, CA, USA; 6: Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, School of Medicine, Stanford University, CA, USA



Self-Consciousness in Vicarious Dreams

Melanie G Rosen

Trent University, Canada



When Consciousness And Sleep Collide: Sensory Sensitivity And Arousal As Factors In Parasomnia Occurance

Sian O. Panton, Shivani Kapoor, Lynne Kabbara, Giulia L. Poerio

University of Sussex, United Kingdom



Whole Βrain Network Dynamics Follow Arousal Fluctuations in Insomnia

Nicholas John Simos1,2,4, Paradeisios Alexandros Boulakis2,3,4, Athena Demertzi2,3,4, Christina Schmidt1,3,4

1: Sleep and Chronobiology Lab, GIGA Research, CRC Human Imaging Unit, Allée du 6 Août 8 (B30), University of Liège, 4000, Belgium; 2: Physiology of Cognition Lab, GIGA Research, CRC Human Imaging Unit, Allée du 6 Août 8 (B30), University of Liège, 4000, Belgium; 3: Psychology and Neuroscience of Cognition Research Unit, University of Liège, Place des Orateurs 3 (B33), 4000, Belgium; 4: Fund for Scientific Research FNRS, Rue d’Egmont 5, B –1000, Brussels, Belgium



What Crosses Your Mind when You Fall Asleep? Data-driven Classification of Conscious Experiences During the Sleep Onset Period.

Nicolas Decat1, Jade Sénéchal1, Ilona Scellier-Dekens1, Hannah de Verville1, Arthur Le Coz1, Ruben Herzog1, Théophile Bieth1, Isabelle Arnulf1,2, Emmanuelle Volle1, Thomas Andrillon1, Delphine Oudiette1,2

1: Paris Brain Institute, Sorbonne Universite, Inserm-CNRS, Paris, 75013, France; 2: APHP-Sorbonne, Pitie-Salpetriere University, Hospital Sleep Disorders Unit, Paris, France



Sleep Affects Low-gamma Range Effective Cortical Connectivity for 40-Hz Auditory Steady-state Responses.

Anna Zofia Lesniewska1, Urszula Gorska-Klimowska1,2, Malgorzata Holda1, Miroslaw Wyczesany1, Marek Binder1

1: Institute of Psychology, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland; 2: Center for Sleep and Consciousness, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, US



Neural Correlates of Auditory Perceptual Consciousness During Sleep

Jeanne Caron-Guyon1, François Stockart2, Dominique Hoffmann3, Lorella Minotti1,4, Philippe Kahane1,4, Michael Pereira1, Jean-Baptiste Eichenlaub2, Alexis Robin1,4, Nathan Faivre2

1: Université Grenoble Alpes, Inserm, U1216, Grenoble-Alpes University Hospital, Grenoble Institut Neurosciences, 38000, Grenoble, France; 2: Université Grenoble Alpes, Université Savoie Mont Blanc, CNRS UMR 5105, Laboratoire de Psychologie et NeuroCognition, 38000 Grenoble, France; 3: Department of Neurosurgery, Grenoble-Alpes University Hospital, Grenoble, France; 4: Department of Neurology, Grenoble-Alpes University Hospital, Grenoble, France



The Dreaming Self: Investigating Sleep and Dream Experiences in Depersonalisation-Derealisation, Depression and Anxiety

Evelyn Dilkes1, Anna Ciaunica2, Helge Gillmeister1

1: University of Essex, United Kingdom; 2: GAIPS INESC-ID, Instituto Superior Tecnico, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal



State Predictors of Dream Recall

Somayeh Ataei1,2, Nikolai Axmacher1, Martin Dresler2, Sarah Schoch2,3

1: Department of Neuropsychology, Faculty of Psychology, Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany; 2: Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, the Netherlands; 3: Center of Competence Sleep & Health Zurich, University of Zurich, Zurich, CH, Switzerland



The Brainstem Navigator: A Toolkit For In-vivo Brainstem Nuclei Atlasing, Connectomics And Evaluation Of Arousal And Sleep Mechanisms In Humans

Marta Bianciardi1,2

1: Brainstem Imaging Laboratory, Department of Radiology, Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States MGH and Harvard Medical School, USA; 2: Division of Sleep Medicine, Harvard University, Boston, MA, USA

4:30pm
-
5:30pm
Poster Session 6- Philosophy, Models & Mechanisms - COFFEE BREAK
Location: FOYER
 

Is My Kitchen Your Kitchen? Explaining Idiosyncrasies in Scene Perception and Exploration Through Individual Differences in Internal Models.

Micha Engeser1,2,3, Daniel Kaiser1,2

1: Neural Computation Group, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Physics, Geography, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen, Gießen 35392, Germany; 2: Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior (CMBB), Philipps-Universität Marburg, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen & Technische Universität Darmstadt, Marburg 35032, Germany; 3: Neural Circuits, Consciousness and Cognition Research Group, Max Planck Institute of Empirical Aesthetics, Frankfurt am Main, Germany



How Brain States Linked To Spontaneous Pupillary Fluctuations Modify Conscious And Unconscious Sensory Neural Processing

Plyfaa Suwanamalik-Murphy1, Victoria Gobo1,2, Javier Gonzalez-Castillo1, Amaia Benitez-Andonegui3, Peter Bandettini1,4, Sharif Kronemer1

1: Section on Functional Imaging Methods, Laboratory of Brain and Cognition, National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, Maryland (MD), United States of America (USA); 2: Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA; 3: MEG Core Facility, NIMH, NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA; 4: Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Core Facility, NIMH, NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA



Exploring How Pupil-Linked Arousal Shapes Perception: The Role of Signal Strength (Task Difficulty)

Sean D. van Mil1, Margot C.E. Steijger1, Stijn A. Nuiten2, Lola Beerendonk1, Jan Willem de Gee3, Johannes J. Fahrenfort4, Timo Stein1, Simon van Gaal1

1: Dept. of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; 2: Dept. of Psychiatry (UPK), University of Basel, Switzerland; 3: Dept. of Cognitive and Systems Neuroscience, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; 4: Dept. of Experimental and Applied Psychology - Cognitive Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands



The Role Of Prediction Error In Auditory Conscious Perception

Yamil Vidal1, Jorie van Haren2, Federico De Martino2, Floris P. de Lange1,3

1: Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging, Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands; 2: Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands; 3: Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands



Fundamental Properties of Predictive Information Processing And The Origins Of Consciousness: Evidence From Drosophila Melanogaster.

Maxime Janbon1, Matthew Van De Poll2, Bruno van Swinderen2, Daniel Bor1, Lars Chittka1

1: Department of Biological and Experimental Psychology, School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK; 2: Queensland Brain institute, The University of Queensland, St lucia, Qld Australia



Effects Of Priors And Feedback On False Perceptions Of Faces And Associated Confidence

Aziza Chebil1, Nathan Faivre2, Anna Castrioto1,3, Michael Pereira1

1: Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Inserm, Grenoble Institut des Neurosciences, Grenoble, France;; 2: Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Univ. Savoie Mont Blanc, CNRS, LPNC, Grenoble, France; 3: Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Inserm, U1216, CHU Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble Institut Neurosciences, Neurology Department, Grenoble, France



Exploring the Relationship between Human Arousal and Feedforward vs. Recurrent Processing

Margot Cornelia Elisabeth Steijger1, Samuel Noorman1,2, Lola Beerendonk1, Sean David van Mil1, Timo Stein1, Johannes Jacobus Fahrenfort1,3, Simon van Gaal1

1: Dept. of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, NL; 2: Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, UMR 8002, CNRS & Université de Paris, Paris 75006, FR; 3: Dept. of Psychology, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, NL



Modelling Gist Perception and Phenomenology with Natural Hybrid Predictive Coding Networks

William S. K. Yun-Farmbrough1, Ishan Singhal1, Christopher L. Buckley1,2, Anil K. Seth1,3

1: Sussex Centre for Consciousness Science, University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom; 2: VERSES AI Resarch Lab, Los Angeles, CA, United States; 3: Program for Brain, Mind, and Consciousness, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR), Toronto, Canada



Catecholamines Reduce Choice History Biases

Jan Willem de Gee1, Niels Kloosterman2, Anke Braun3, Tobias Donner4

1: University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; 2: University of Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany; 3: Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany; 4: University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany



PEYES: An Open-Source Python Toolkit For Eye Tracking Data Analysis And Detector Evaluation

Jonathan Nir1, Leon Yona Deouell1,2

1: Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 9190401, Israel; 2: Department of Psychology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 9190501, Israel



Activity In Extrastriate Body Area Reflects Robotically-induced Bias In Estimating Number Of Humans

Louis Philippe Albert1, Bruno Herbelin1, Fosco Bernasconi1, Olaf Blanke1,2

1: EPFL, Switzerland; 2: University of Geneva, Switzerland



Probing The Contents Of The Multi-feature Object Search Templates

Chris Brown

Bournemouth University, United Kingdom



Backpropagation Does Not Discover Sequential Solutions to Static Hierarchical Tasks

Marcel Graetz, Alfonso Renart

Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown, Lisbon, Portugal



Tagging Conscious Re-entry: An EEG Frequency Tagging Study of Re-emergence in Motion Induced Blindness

Jonathan Edward Robinson1, András Zoltan Sárközy2, Gyula Kovács2, Jakob Hohwy1

1: Monash University, Melbourne, Australia; 2: Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany



The Time Course of Neural Activity Predictive of Impending Movement

Aaron Schurger1, Lucas Jeay-Bizot1, Robert Schapire2, Uri Maoz1, Mehmet Basbug3

1: Brain Institute, Chapman University, USA; 2: Microsoft Research, New York, New York, USA; 3: Department of Computer Science, Princeton University, USA



The Soft Problem of Consciousness: Consequences of the Human Affectome

Alessandra Nicoletta Cruz Yu1, Daniela Schiller2

1: Nash Family Department of Neuroscience, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, United States; 2: Department of Psychiatry, the Nash Family Department of Neuroscience, and the Friedman Brain Institute, at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, United States



Short-run Cointegration for Neurophysiological Processes

Lionel Charles Barnett, Anil Kumar Seth

Sussex Centre for Consciousness Science, University of Sussex, United Kingdom



Increasing Power for Detecting Awareness: A New Approach to Test Group Level Objective Performance

Shaked Lublinsky1, Itay Yaron1, William Marshall2, Liad Mudrik1,3

1: Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel; 2: Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada; 3: School of Psychological Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel



Rethinking Subjective vs. Objective Thresholds

JoJo Widi, Aaron Schurger

Chapman University, United States of America



Decoding Conscious Auditory Perception: a Task-related vs. Task-free fMRI Study

Julie Boyer1, Benoit Beranger2, Alizée Lopez-Persem3, Nathan Beraud1, Hortense Gouyette1, Claire Sergent1

1: Université Paris Cité, INCC UMR 8002, CNRS, Paris, France; 2: Centre de NeuroImagerie de Recherche - CENIR, Institut du Cerveau - ICM, Paris, France; 3: FrontLab, Institut du Cerveau - ICM, Inserm, CNRS, Sorbonne University, APHP, Paris, France



Advancing the Parcellation of the Pulvinar with a Multimodal Informational Framework

Sara Cavuoti Cabanillas1,2,3, Marco Tamietto3,4, Pietro Avanzini Avanzini5, Matteo Diano3,4, Luca Bonini2

1: International School of Advanced Studies, Theoretical and Applied Neuroscience, Cognitive and Behavioural Neuroscience Unit, University of Camerino, Camerino, Italy; 2: Department of Medicine and Surgery, University of Parma, Parma, Italy; 3: Department of Psychology, University of Turin, Turin, Italy; 4: Neuroscience Institute of Turin (NIT), Turin, Italy; 5: CNR, Istituto di Neuroscienze, Parma, Italy



Mind, Language, and Experience

Richard Davies Gill

Oxford University; UKAEA, retired, United Kingdom



Transdisciplinary Science for Consciousness Science, Design and Ongoing Examples in the Field

Camilo Miguel Signorelli1,2, Mar Estarellas3, Ignacio Cea4

1: Department of Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; 2: Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford, United Kingdom; 3: Consciousness and Cognition Lab, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; 4: Center for Research, Innovation and Creation, Temuco Catholic University, Chile



Does Consciousness Matter Morally? A Survey on Folk and Expert Intuitions

Rony Hirschhorn, Niccolo Negro, Liad Mudrik

Tel Aviv University, Israel



Trust In Phenomenology

Ohad Livnat, Ran Hassin

Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel



Cognitive Phenomenology Enables Complex Behavior

Wiktor Piotr Lachowski

Institute of Philosophy and Sociology at Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland



Why Is Anything Conscious?

Michael Timothy Bennett1, Sean Welsh2, Anna Ciaunica3,4

1: School of Computing, Australian National University, ACT, Australia.; 2: Engine No. 2, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.; 3: Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, UCL, WC1N 3AZ, London, UK.; 4: Centre for Philosophy of Science, University of Lisbon, Campo Grande, 1749-016 Lisbon, Portugal.



A transcendental refutation of Dennett’s Theory of Consciousness--A Dialogue between Fichte and Dennett

Hui Gao

Inner Mongolia University, China, People's Republic of



Ontological Diversity in Fundamental Physics and its Significance for Consciousness Research

Alfredo Parra-Hinojosa1, Chris Percy1,2

1: Qualia Research Institute, United Kingdom; 2: University of Derby



Why Experiences Feel The Way They Do: Intrinsicalism Or Relationalism

Davide Aldé1,2

1: Monash University, Australia; 2: Monash Centre for Consciousness and Contemplative Studies (M3CS)



A Logical ‘Deadlock’ for Qualia: Why Accepting or Rejecting Zombies Points to Illusionism

Taras Tarasenko

First Moscow State Medical University, Russian Federation



Does Consciousness Suddenly Disappear?

Maria Avramidou

University of Oxford, United Kingdom



Consciousness in “Moral” Responsibility - A Reframed Consequentialist Account

Ting Huang

Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany



Does Phenomenology Support the Axiomatic Framework of Integrated Information Theory (IIT)?

Sergio Ponce de Leon, Jeff Yoshimi

University of California, Merced, United States of America



Structural Representations Avoid Sceptical Conclusions in Active Inference

Joseph Philip Melling

Monash University, Australia



Disambiguating Consciousness: A Framework for Classifying Conscious Systems (2.0)

Andrew Proulx

University of California, Merced, United States of America



Why Is Phenomenal Consciousness So Hard to Dismiss? A Three-Perspective Analysis of Resistance to Illusionism

Can Du

University of Sheffield



The Feeling of Unfelt Pain:Insights from Replicated and Enhanced Experimental Philosophy Studies

Léa Moncoucy, Krzysztof Dołęga, Axel Cleeremans

Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium



On-off Synecdoche: a Just Good Enough Model of Subjective Experience

Mario Martinez-Saito

HSE University, Russian Federation



Unveiling The Elemental Hum Of Interoceptive Experience

Deborah Cocheo

Indiana University Bloomington, United States of America



The Unconscious Explicated

Daniel Lennart Müller

University of Osnabrück, Germany



Reformulation of the Inverted Qualia Argument and Its Experimental Test

Yu Togashi1, Yuko Yotsumoto1, Naotsugu Tsuchiya2, Masafumi Oizumi1

1: The University of Tokyo, Japan; 2: Monash University, Melbourne, Australia



Perspectival Information: The Role of Consciousness in Self-location and Multisensory Integration

Miguel Ángel Sebastián

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico



Which Way Does the Intentional Stance Face: Biopsychism, Fictionalism, or Illusionism?

Simon Bowes, Adam Rostowski

University of Sussex, United Kingdom



The Blue is Sky: Color Qualia as Learned Associative Structures

Carlos Stein Brito1,2

1: Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown; 2: NightCity Labs



Compatibilist and Incompatibilist Illusionism

Anton Kuznetsov

Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russian Federation



A Model to Demonstrate that Mental Entity Does Not Exist

Wenge Huang, Ou Xie

Independent Researcher, China, People's Republic of



Does a Simple Theory of Introspection Refute Illusionism about Qualia?

Evgeny Loginov

Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russian Federation



Content Consciousness as an Acquired Cognition Entangled with Tool Evolution

Carsten Korth

Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Germany



Structural Constraints To Compare Phenomenal Experience

Joaquin Díaz Boils1, Nao Tsuchiya2, Camilo Miguel Signorelli3

1: Universitat de Valencia, Spain; 2: Monash University, Australia; 3: University of Copenhagen, Denmark



What Is It Like To Be A Predictive Model?

Susan Blackmore

University of Plymouth, United Kingdom



Divergent Perception: A New Theoretical Foundation for the Study of Creative Cognition

Antoine Bellemare-Pepin1,2, Karim Jerbi1,3,4

1: Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal, Québec, Canada; 2: American and Indigenous Studies, Bard College, NY, USA; 3: UNIQUE Center (Quebec Neuro-AI Research Center), Montreal, Quebec, Canada; 4: MILA (Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute), Montreal, Quebec, Canada



External Noise Exclusion As A Potential Mechanism Of Load-Dependent Gradedness Of Scene Gist Perceptual Awareness Ratings

Suraj Kumar1, Narayanan Srinivasan2

1: Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, India; 2: Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, India



Neutrality Doesn’t Exist: an EEG Study of Micro-valence

Inès Mentec, Guillaume Pech, Axel Cleeremans

Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium


 
Contact and Legal Notice · Contact Address:
Privacy Statement · Conference: ASSC 2025
Conference Software: ConfTool Pro 2.8.106+CC
© 2001–2025 by Dr. H. Weinreich, Hamburg, Germany