Does Cognitive Load Affect Measures of Consciousness?
André Sevenius Nilsen, Johan Frederik Storm, Bjørn Erik Juel

TL;DR
This study investigates how cognitive load affects different measures of consciousness using EEG recordings from participants in varying mental states.
Contribution
The study evaluates the robustness of consciousness measures against cognitive load, identifying signal diversity-based measures as reliable in clinical contexts.
Findings
The P300b event-related potential was significantly affected by cognitive load.
Signal diversity-based measures of EEG were not affected by cognitive load.
Signal diversity-based measures may be suitable for clinical use when attention or sensory processing is impaired.
Abstract
Background: Developing and testing methods for reliably measuring the state of consciousness of individuals is important for both basic research and clinical purposes. In recent years, several promising measures of consciousness, grounded in theoretical developments, have been proposed. However, the degrees to which these measures are affected by changes in brain activity that are not related to changes in the degree of consciousness has not been well tested. In this study, we examined whether several of these measures are modulated by the loading of cognitive resources. Methods: We recorded electroencephalography (EEG) from 12 participants in two conditions: (1) while passively attending to sensory stimuli related to the measures and (2) during increased cognitive load consisting of a demanding working memory task. We investigated whether a set of proposed objective EEG-based measures…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies · EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces
