Can We Test Consciousness Theories on AI? Ablations, Markers, and Robustness
Yin Jun Phua

TL;DR
This paper uses artificial agents with specific neural architectures to test and compare key predictions of consciousness theories like GWT, IIT, and HOT, revealing their functional distinctions and interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a synthetic neuro-phenomenology approach, creating agents to experimentally test and dissociate the functional roles of different consciousness theories.
Findings
Self-Model lesion causes blindsight-like behavior, supporting HOT.
Workspace capacity is causally necessary for information access, aligning with GWT.
Broadcast amplification increases internal noise, indicating fragility in GWT-style broadcasting.
Abstract
The search for reliable indicators of consciousness has fragmented into competing theoretical camps (Global Workspace Theory (GWT), Integrated Information Theory (IIT), and Higher-Order Theories (HOT)), each proposing distinct neural signatures. We adopt a synthetic neuro-phenomenology approach: constructing artificial agents that embody these mechanisms to test their functional consequences through precise architectural ablations impossible in biological systems. Across three experiments, we report dissociations suggesting these theories describe complementary functional layers rather than competing accounts. In Experiment 1, a no-rewire Self-Model lesion abolishes metacognitive calibration while preserving first-order task performance, yielding a synthetic blindsight analogue consistent with HOT predictions. In Experiment 2, workspace capacity proves causally necessary for information…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmbodied and Extended Cognition · Free Will and Agency · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
