An algebraic theory to discriminate qualia in the brain
Yoshiyuki Ohmura, Wataru Shimaya, Yasuo Kuniyoshi

TL;DR
This paper introduces an algebraic framework for understanding how the brain discriminates between different qualia, proposing that weakening inter-axis independence enables qualia type separation in neural representations.
Contribution
It develops an algebraic independence concept linking neural invariants to qualia discrimination, advancing the mathematical modeling of consciousness.
Findings
Neural networks can separate qualia types using algebraic independence.
The proposed model links algebraic invariance to neural representation of qualia.
Qualia types form distinct metric spaces in the latent neural space.
Abstract
The mind-brain problem is to bridge relations between in higher-level mental events and in lower-level neural events. To address this, some mathematical models have been proposed to explain how the brain can represent the discriminative structure of qualia, but they remain unresolved due to a lack of validation methods. To understand the qualia discrimination mechanism, we need to ask how the brain autonomously develops such a mathematical structure using the constructive approach. In unsupervised representation learning, independence between axes is generally used to constrain the latent vector but independence between axes cannot explain qualia type discrimination because independent axes cannot distinguish between inter-qualia type independence (e.g., vision and touch) and intra-qualia type independence (e.g., green and red). We hypothesised that inter-axis independence must be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural dynamics and brain function · Neural Networks and Applications · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
