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  1. Learning under anesthesia: Checking the light in the fridge? Commentary on deeprose and Andrade (2006).Thomas Schmidt - 2006 - Consciousness and Cognition 15 (1):24-27.
    Research on learning under anesthesia has focused on showing that learning is possible in the absence of awareness. However, a simple dissociation between learning and awareness is conclusive only under strong additional assumptions, and the actual state of consciousness of an anesthetized person is difficult to determine. Instead of trying to establish complete unconsciousness, one might employ gradual anesthesia to experimentally vary the level of consciousness in a controlled fashion, checking whether cognitive processes exist that can change in opposite direction (...)
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  • Anesthesia and the electrophysiology of auditory consciousness.Susan Pockett - 1999 - Consciousness and Cognition 8 (1):45-61.
    Empirical work is reviewed which correlates the presence or absence of various parts of the auditory evoked potential with the disappearance and reemergence of auditory sensation during induction of and recovery from anesthesia. As a result, the hypothesis is generated that the electrophysiological correlate of auditory sensation is whatever neural activity generates the middle latency waves of the auditory evoked potential. This activity occurs from 20 to 80 ms poststimulus in the primary and secondary areas of the auditory cortex. Evidence (...)
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