The first two years of this ERC Consolidator project have been highly productive. An excellent, well-coordinated team has been assembled, enabling strong progress across all three work packages (WPs).
WP1 investigates the neural and chemical mechanisms of conscious experience. Despite a slight start-up delay, participant recruitment is underway. Studies by PhD students focus on how GABAergic modulation and expectations shape feedforward and feedback processing using pharmacology (Lorazepam), EEG, fMRI, and pupil-linked arousal measures.
WP2 examines how fluctuations in brain states (arousal) influence conscious experience. Several large datasets have been collected, and are currently analyzed, exploring the effects of sleep deprivation, task difficulty, and active versus passive states on perception and neural processing. Initial findings already show that pupil-linked arousal affects feedback but not feedforward activity. We have also developed new methodologies, including a novel analysis protocol that separates pupil-linked arousal into long-, medium-, and short-term arousal fluctuations, rather than treating them as a single measure. Additional theoretical work is underway to clarify assumptions about pupil size as a marker of neuromodulatory activity.
WP3 explores the interplay between predictions and conscious experience. An initial study has been completed, and follow-up studies are planned to further understand how different types of predictions shape conscious perception.
Overall, despite the complexity of the studies, substantial phttps://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/grants-app/reporting/VAADIN/themes/sygma/icons/arrowOff.pngrogress has been made in data collection, method development, and theoretical integration.