Toggle light / dark theme

Get the latest international news and world events from around the world.

Log in for authorized contributors

Spontaneous metacognitive experiences and involuntary memories in the laboratory

A recent study published in Consciousness and Cognition provides evidence that everyday mental quirks like déjà vu or tip of the tongue states are natural byproducts of a resting mind. The findings suggest that when a person’s attention is not fully occupied, a wide variety of spontaneous thoughts and reflective feelings naturally emerge into awareness.

The scientists conducted the research to understand if a broad spectrum of unprompted mental experiences could be systematically captured in a laboratory setting. Past research has mostly focused on involuntary memories, which are recollections of personal events that pop into the mind without warning. The team wanted to know if the same boring, repetitive conditions that produce these memories might also generate other spontaneous phenomena.

They specifically focused on metacognition. Metacognition is a term used to describe the brain’s ability to think about and monitor its own processes. While people sometimes use metacognition deliberately, such as trying to gauge how well they learned a topic for a test, it can also happen without effort.

Spontaneous metacognition includes sudden feelings like déjà vu, which is the sensation that a new situation is highly familiar. It also includes the sudden realization that a well known word looks strangely incorrect, a phenomenon known as jamais vu.

“This study was motivated by the observation that many mental experiences—such as déjà vu, tip-of-the-tongue states, or sudden memories—seem to appear spontaneously in everyday life, yet they are usually studied separately in different areas of psychology,” explained study author Krystian Barzykowski, the head of the Applied Memory Research Laboratory at Jagiellonian University and Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at the Grenoble Alpes University.

Abstract: Consciousness and Cognition.

Behavioral scientists found that people without children develop a relationship to mortality that is psychologically distinct. Without biological continuation

I’ve been thinking about death differently lately. Not in a morbid way, not in a crisis way. More like the way you start noticing a sound you’d been filtering out for years. A few months ago, I was having dinner near Tanjong Pagar with a woman I’ve known for about eight years, a 56-year-old consultant who runs a small but well-regarded advisory firm. She has no children. Never wanted them, she told me once, years ago, with the kind of calm clarity that made the topic feel settled. But that night, she said something that hasn’t settled at all. She said, “The hardest part of not having kids isn’t the loneliness people assume. It’s figuring out what your life means when there’s no one who carries it forward.”

She said it the way you’d describe a delayed train. Factual. Slightly inconvenient. Already accommodated.

That sentence has stayed with me. Because over nearly two decades of building companies across multiple countries, I’ve watched the question of legacy come up again and again in people’s lives, usually somewhere around their late forties or early fifties, and I’ve noticed something: the people who face it most directly, most honestly, are often the ones without children.


Without biological continuation, people who never have children are forced to build their own relationship with mortality from scratch, and the psychological architecture that requires turns out to be both more fragile and more deliberate than most of us assume.

How AI is integrated into clinical workflow lowers medical liability perception

Artificial intelligence (AI) is changing the field and practice of medicine, including legal liability and the perception of who is at fault when a patient experiences harm. “AI holds promise to improve the quality and safety of health care and to reduce errors and patient harm, but the risk of legal liability is a potential barrier for investment and development of this technology as well as the quality of care,” said Michael Bruno, professor of radiology and of medicine at Penn State College of Medicine.

Now, Bruno, working alongside a team of researchers from Brown University and Seton Hall University School of Law, found that the understanding of physician liability is influenced by the way in which AI is integrated into a clinician’s workflow. The study was published in the journal Nature Health.

The researchers presented mock jurors with a hypothetical malpractice case where a patient suffered irreversible brain damage because a radiologist didn’t detect a brain bleed from a computerized tomography (CT) scan, even though AI correctly identified the scan as abnormal.

Everyday mental quirks like déjà vu might be natural byproducts of a resting mind

A recent study published in Consciousness and Cognition provides evidence that everyday mental quirks like déjà vu or tip of the tongue states are natural byproducts of a resting mind. The findings suggest that when a person’s attention is not fully occupied, a wide variety of spontaneous thoughts and reflective feelings naturally emerge into awareness.

The scientists conducted the research to understand if a broad spectrum of unprompted mental experiences could be systematically captured in a laboratory setting. Past research has mostly focused on involuntary memories, which are recollections of personal events that pop into the mind without warning. The team wanted to know if the same boring, repetitive conditions that produce these memories might also generate other spontaneous phenomena.

They specifically focused on metacognition. Metacognition is a term used to describe the brain’s ability to think about and monitor its own processes. While people sometimes use metacognition deliberately, such as trying to gauge how well they learned a topic for a test, it can also happen without effort.

Joscha Bach delivers “The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis” at Future Day 2026

Can AI become conscious?

What is consciousness for? And is biological consciousness best understood as a self-organising algorithm that could, in principle, be recreated in machines?

In this talk, Joscha explores consciousness as perception of perception, coherence maintenance, modelling, resonance, self-organisation, and the possibility that machine consciousness may emerge through the right virtual architecture.

Essay: ‘The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis’ by Joscha Bach & Hikari Sorenson: https://cimc.ai/cimcHypothesis.pdf

CIMC: https://cimc.ai

Post: https://scifuture.org/joscha-bach-the… Intro

Do we really control our own decisions?

For decades, neuroscientists have explored a fascinating phenomenon in the human brain known as the split-brain experiment. When the connection between the two hemispheres of the brain — the Corpus Callosum — is surgically cut, something extraordinary happens.

Each hemisphere begins processing information independently.

In groundbreaking research conducted by neuroscientist Michael Gazzaniga, scientists discovered that the speaking side of the brain often creates explanations for actions it did not initiate. This phenomenon is known as the Left-Brain Interpreter.

Instead of admitting uncertainty, the brain rapidly constructs logical stories to explain behavior. These experiments revealed how the human mind continuously builds a coherent narrative about our identity, decisions, and sense of self.

The split-brain studies remain one of the most important discoveries in modern neuroscience, raising profound questions about consciousness, decision-making, and the nature of the human mind.

Read more

Philip Kitcher — Philosophy of Reductionism & Emergence

Like us on Facebook for daily videos, updates, announcements, and much more: https://shorturl.at/tak4l.

Can biology be explained entirely in terms of chemistry and then physics? If so, that’s “reductionism.” Or are there “emergent” properties at higher levels of the hierarchy of life that cannot be explained by properties at lower or more basic levels?

Wear your support for the show with a Closer To Truth merchandise purchase: https://bit.ly/3P2ogje.

Philip Stuart Kitcher is a British philosopher who is the John Dewey Professor Emeritus of philosophy at Columbia University. He specialises in the philosophy of science, the philosophy of biology, the philosophy of mathematics, and more recently pragmatism.

Donate to help Closer To Truth continue exploring the world’s deepest questions without the need for paywalls: https://closertotruth.com/donate/

Closer To Truth, hosted by Robert Lawrence Kuhn and directed by Peter Getzels, presents the world’s greatest thinkers exploring humanity’s deepest questions. Discover fundamental issues of existence. Engage new and diverse ways of thinking. Appreciate intense debates. Share your own opinions. Seek your own answers.

Cosmic Megafauna — Could Giant Alien Life Forms Exist?

Space is big—but could life out there be even bigger? Join us as we ask just how enormous alien life can get—and what it might look like.

Watch my exclusive video Fishbowl Starships — Water As Shielding — https://nebula.tv/videos/isaacarthur–
Get Nebula using my link for 40% off an annual subscription: https://go.nebula.tv/isaacarthur.
Get a Lifetime Membership to Nebula for only $300: https://go.nebula.tv/lifetime?ref=isa
Use the link https://gift.nebula.tv/isaacarthur to give a year of Nebula to a friend for just $36.

Visit our Website: http://www.isaacarthur.net.
Join Nebula: https://go.nebula.tv/isaacarthur.
Support us on Patreon: / isaacarthur.
Support us on Subscribestar: https://www.subscribestar.com/isaac-a
Facebook Group: / 1583992725237264
Reddit: / isaacarthur.
Twitter: / isaac_a_arthur on Twitter and RT our future content.
SFIA Discord Server: / discord.
Credits:
Cosmic Megafauna — Could Giant Alien Life Forms Exist?
Episode 727; June 26, 2025
Written, Produced & Narrated by: Isaac Arthur.
Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images.
Music Courtesy of Epidemic Sound http://epidemicsound.com/creator.
Stellardrone, \

Read more

/* */