Quantum information in neural systems
Danko D. Georgiev

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential role of quantum physics in understanding consciousness, emphasizing how quantum interactions and entanglement could underpin neural processes related to conscious experience.
Contribution
It introduces a quantum dynamical timescale for conscious processes and demonstrates how quantum interactions influence entanglement and observable correlations in neural systems.
Findings
Quantum coherence alone does not support cognitive binding.
Non-zero interaction Hamiltonians enable entanglement and correlations.
Quantum interactions are crucial for dynamical changes in neural entanglement.
Abstract
Identifying the physiological processes in the central nervous system that underlie our conscious experiences has been at the forefront of cognitive neuroscience. While the principles of classical physics were long found to be unaccommodating for a causally effective consciousness, the inherent indeterminism of quantum physics, together with its characteristic dichotomy between quantum states and quantum observables, provides a fertile ground for the physical modeling of consciousness. Here, we utilize the Schr\"odinger equation, together with the Planck--Einstein relation between energy and frequency, in order to determine the appropriate quantum dynamical timescale of conscious processes. Furthermore, with the help of a simple two-qubit toy model we illustrate the importance of non-zero interaction Hamiltonian for the generation of quantum entanglement and manifestation of observable…
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