- they were more likely to believe they were in an environment 
   completely different from the physical space they were actually in -----> 
   sounds familiar
   - they often believed to be interacting with "beings" such as 
   hallucinated dead people, aliens, fairies or mythical creatures ------> 
   machines 
   - the often reported "ego dissolution", a variety of experiences in 
   which the self ceased to exist in the user's subjective experience. ------> 
   3p?



Is the key to consciousness in the claustrum?by Klaus M. Stiefel, The 
Conversation
[image: Is the key to consciousness in the claustrum?]
The location of the claustrum (blue) and the cingulate cortex (green), 
another brain region likely to act as a global integrator. The person whose 
brain is shown is looking to the right (see the inset in the top right 
corner). Credit: Brain 
…more<http://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-05-key-consciousness-claustrum.html>

Consciousness is one of the most fascinating and elusive phenomena we 
humans face. Every single one of us experiences it but it remains 
surprisingly poorly understood.

That said, psychology, neuroscience and philosophy are currently making 
interesting progress in the comprehension of this phenomenon.

The main player in this story is something called the 
claustrum<http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/claustrum>. 
The word originally described an enclosed space in medieval European 
monasteries but in the mammalian brain it refers to a small sheet of 
neurons just below the 
cortex<http://biology.about.com/od/anatomy/p/cerebral-cortex.htm>, 
and possibly derived from it in brain development.

The cortex <http://medicalxpress.com/tags/cortex/> is the massive folded 
layer on top of the brain mainly responsible for many higher brain 
functions such as language, long-term planning and our advanced sensory 
functions.

Interestingly, the claustrum is strongly reciprocally connected to many 
cortical 
areas <http://medicalxpress.com/tags/cortical+areas/>. The visual 
cortex<http://medicalxpress.com/tags/visual+cortex/> (the 
region involved in seeing) sends axons (the connecting "wires" of the 
nervous system) to the claustrum, and also receives axons from the 
claustrum.

The same is true for the auditory 
cortex<http://medicalxpress.com/tags/auditory+cortex/> (involved 
in hearing) and a number of other cortex areas. A wealth of information 
converges in the claustrum and leaves it to re-enter the cortex.

*The connection*

Francis 
Crick<http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1962/crick-bio.html>
 – 
who together with James 
Watson<http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1962/watson-facts.html>
 gave 
us the structure of DNA – was interested in a connection between the 
claustrum and consciousness <http://medicalxpress.com/tags/consciousness/>.

In a recent paper, published in Frontiers in Integrative 
Neuroscience<http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnint.2014.00020/abstract>,
 
we have built on the ideas he described in his very last scientific 
publication <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1569501/>.

Crick and co-author Christoph 
Koch<http://www.alleninstitute.org/our-institute/our-team/profiles/christof-koch>
 argued 
that the claustrum could be a coordinator of cortical 
function<http://www.klab.caltech.edu/news/crick-koch-05.pdf> and 
hence a "conductor of consciousness".

Such percepts as colour, form, sound, body position and social relations 
are all represented in different parts of the cortex. How are they bound to 
a unified experience of consciousness? Wouldn't a region exerting a (even 
limited) central control over all these cortical areas be highly useful?

This is what Crick and Koch suggested when they hypothesised the claustrum 
to be a "conductor of consciousness". But how could this hypothesis about 
the claustrum's role be tested?

*Plant power alters the mind*
[image: Is the key to consciousness in the claustrum?]
Salvia divinorum (Herba de Maria). Credit: Wikipedia, CC BY

Enter the plant *Salvia divinorum 
<https://www.erowid.org/plants/salvia/salvia.shtml>*, a type of mint native 
to Mexico. The Mazatecs civilisation's priests would chew its leaves to get 
in touch with the gods.

It's a powerful psychedelic, but not of the usual type. Substances such as 
LSD <https://www.erowid.org/chemicals/lsd/lsd.shtml> 
andpsylocibin<https://www.erowid.org/plants/mushrooms/mushrooms.shtml> (the 
active compound in "magic" mushrooms) mainly act by binding to the 
serotonin neuromodulator receptor proteins.

It is not completely understood how these receptors bring about altered 
states of consciousness, but a reduction of the inhibitory (negative 
feedback) communication between neurons in the cortex likely plays a role.

In contrast, *Salvia divinorum* acts on the kappa-opiate 
receptors<http://www.guidetopharmacology.org/GRAC/ObjectDisplayForward?objectId=318>.
 
These are structurally related, but their activation has quite different 
effects than the mu-opiate 
receptors<http://www.guidetopharmacology.org/GRAC/ObjectDisplayForward?objectId=319>which
 
bind substances such as morphine or heroin.

In contrast to the mu-opiate receptors, which are involved in the 
processing of pain, the role of the kappa-opiate receptors is somewhat 
poorly understood.

Where are these kappa-opiate receptors located in the brain? You might have 
guessed it, they are most densely concentrated in the claustrum (and 
present at lower densities in a number of other brain regions such as the 
frontal cortex and the amygdala).

So, the activity of *Salvia* likely inhibits the claustrum via its 
activation of the kappa-opiate receptors. Consuming *Salvia* might just 
cause the inactivation of the claustrum necessary to test Crick and Koch's 
hypothesis.

*Any volunteers?*

Did we administer this psychedelic to a group of volunteers to then record 
their hallucinations and altered perceptions? Well, no. To get ethics 
approval for such an experiment with a substance outlawed in Australia 
would be near impossible.

While *Salvia* is not known to be toxic or addictive, the current societal 
climate is not very sympathetic towards psychoactive substances other than 
alcohol.

But fortunately we had an alternative. The website 
Erowid.org<https://www.erowid.org/> hosts 
a database of many thousand trip reports, submitted by psychedelic 
enthusiasts, describing often in considerable detail what went on in their 
minds when consuming a wide selection of substances.

We analysed trip reports from this website written by folks who had 
consumed *Salvia divinorum* and, for comparison, LSD.

We found that subjects consuming *Salvia* were more likely to experience a 
few select psychological effects:

   - they were more likely to believe they were in an environment 
   completely different from the physical space they were actually in
   - they often believed to be interacting with "beings" such as 
   hallucinated dead people, aliens, fairies or mythical creatures
   - the often reported "ego dissolution", a variety of experiences in 
   which the self ceased to exist in the user's subjective experience.

… and this means?

Altered surroundings, other beings and ego dissolution – this surely hints 
at a disturbance of the "conductor of consciousness", as expected if the 
conductor claustrum is perturbed by *Salvia divinorum*.

If a region central to the integration of consciously represented 
information is disturbed in its function, we would expect fundamental 
disturbances in the conscious experience. The core of a person's 
consciousness seems to be altered by *Salvia divinorum*, rather than merely 
some distortions of vision or audition.

We believe that the psychological effects of *Salvia divinorum*, together 
with the massive concentration of the kappa-opiate receptors (the target 
molecules of *Salvia divinorum*) in the claustrum support its role as a 
central coordinator of consciousness.

It's worth noting that our results were not black-and-white. The users of 
LSD also experienced (albeit to a lesser degree) translation into altered 
environments, fairies and ego dissolution.

This, together with a review of the literature convinced us that the 
claustrum is one of the conductors of consciousness, with brain areas 
cingulate cortex and pulvinar likely being the other ones.

Still, the claustrum appears to be special in the brain's connectivity and 
we think that*Salvia* can inactivate it. We hope that the experimental 
neuroscience community will take advantage of the window into the mind 
which this unique substance provides.

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