6533b859fe1ef96bd12b835c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The Attention Schema Theory: A Foundation for Engineering Artificial Consciousness

Michael S. A. Graziano

subject

Property (philosophy)media_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:Mechanical engineering and machineryInternal modelArtificial consciousness050105 experimental psychologylcsh:QA75.5-76.9503 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineArtificial Intelligence0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesHuman–machine systemawarenesslcsh:TJ1-1570body schemamedia_commonCognitive scienceinternal modelbusiness.industry05 social sciencesFoundation (evidence)Computer Science ApplicationsattentionBody schemavisual attentionArtificial intelligencelcsh:Electronic computers. Computer scienceConsciousnessbusinessPsychologyAttribution030217 neurology & neurosurgery

description

The purpose of the attention schema theory is to explain how an information-processing device, the brain, arrives at the claim that it possesses a non-physical, subjective awareness, and assigns a high degree of certainty to that extraordinary claim. The theory does not address how the brain might actually possess a non-physical essence. It is not a theory that deals in the non-physical. It is about the computations that cause a machine to make a claim and to assign a high degree of certainty to the claim. The theory is offered as a possible starting point for building artificial consciousness. Given current technology, it should be possible to build a machine that contains a rich internal model of what consciousness is, attributes that property of consciousness to itself and to the people it interacts with, and uses that attribution to make predictions about human behavior. Such a machine would “believe” it is conscious and act like it is conscious, in the same sense that the human machine believes and acts.

10.3389/frobt.2017.00060http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frobt.2017.00060/full