On the Theoretical Possibility of Quantum Visual Information Transfer to the Human Brain
V. Salari, M. Rahnama, J. A. Tuszynski

TL;DR
This paper explores the theoretical possibility of quantum information transfer to the human brain, examining various hypotheses and debates about quantum processing, wave function collapse, and the brain's capacity to receive and process quantum visual information.
Contribution
It synthesizes existing theories and arguments to propose that different approaches may collectively enable a form of quantum information teleportation to the brain.
Findings
Quantum states of photons can collapse in the eye.
Decoherence does not entirely rule out quantum processing in the brain.
Multiple hypotheses may collectively support quantum information transfer.
Abstract
The feasibility of wave function collapse in the human brain has been the subject of vigorous scientific debates since the advent of quantum theory. Scientists like Von Neumann, London, Bauer and Wigner (initially) believed that wave function collapse occurs in the brain or is caused by the mind of the observer. It is a legitimate question to ask how human brain can receive subtle external visual quantum information intact when it must pass through very noisy and complex pathways from the eye to the brain? There are several approaches to investigate information processing in the brain, each of which presents a different set of conclusions. Penrose and Hameroff have hypothesized that there is quantum information processing inside the human brain whose material substrate involves microtubules and consciousness is the result of a collective wavefunction collapse occurring in these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Biofield Effects and Biophysics · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research
