Skip to main content
Behavioural Neurology logoLink to Behavioural Neurology
. 2011 Mar 29;24(1):107–116. doi: 10.3233/BEN-2011-0322

Consciousness: A Neurological Perspective

Andrea E Cavanna 1,2,*, Sachin Shah 1,3, Clare M Eddy 1, Adrian Williams 4, Hugh Rickards 1
PMCID: PMC5378000  PMID: 21447904

Abstract

Consciousness is a state so essentially entwined with human experience, yet so difficult to conceptually define and measure. In this article, we explore how a bidimensional model of consciousness involving both level of arousal and subjective awareness of the contents of consciousness can be used to differentiate a range of healthy and altered conscious states. These include the different sleep stages of healthy individuals and the altered states of consciousness associated with neurological conditions such as epilepsy, vegetative state and coma. In particular, we discuss how arousal and awareness are positively correlated in normal physiological states with the exception of REM sleep, while a disturbance in this relationship is characteristic of vegetative state, minimally conscious state, complex partial seizures and sleepwalking.

Keywords: Arousal, awareness, coma, consciousness, epilepsy, neurology, sleep


Articles from Behavioural Neurology are provided here courtesy of Wiley

RESOURCES