In a circa-2002 publication of
The Journal of Consciousness Studies, the electromagnetic theory of consciousness faced an uphill battle for acceptance among cognitive scientists. "No serious researcher I know believes in an electromagnetic theory of consciousness",
Bernard Baars wrote in an e-mail. Baars is a neurobiologist and co-editor of
Consciousness and Cognition, another scientific journal in the field. "It's not really worth talking about scientifically", However,
David Chalmers argues against quantum consciousness. He instead discusses how
quantum mechanics may relate to
dualistic consciousness. Chalmers is skeptical that any new physics can resolve the
hard problem of consciousness. He argues that quantum theories of consciousness suffer from the same weakness as more conventional theories. Just as he argues that there is no particular reason why particular macroscopic physical features in the brain should give rise to consciousness, he also thinks that there is no particular reason why a particular quantum feature, such as the EM field in the brain, should give rise to consciousness either. Despite the existence of
transcranial magnetic stimulation with medical purposes, Y. H. Sohn, A. Kaelin-Lang and M. Hallett have denied it, and later
Jeffrey Gray states in his book
Consciousness: Creeping up on the Hard Problem, that tests looking for the influence of
electromagnetic fields on brain function have been
universally negative in their result. However, a number of studies have found clear neural effects from EM stimulation. • Dobson, et al. (2000): 1.8 millitesla = 18,000 mG • Thomas, et al. (2007): 400 microtesla = 4000 milligauss • Huesser, et al. (1997): 0.1 millitesla = 1000 mG • Bell, et al. (2007) 0.78 Gauss = 780 mG • Marino, et al. (2004): 1 Gauss = 1000 mG • Jacobson (1994): 5 picotesla = 0.00005 mG • Sandyk (1999): Picotesla range In April 2022, the results of two related experiments at the
University of Alberta and
Princeton University were announced at
The Science of Consciousness conference, providing further evidence to support quantum processes operating within microtubules. In a study
Stuart Hameroff was part of,
Jack Tuszyński of the
University of Alberta demonstrated that
anesthetics hasten the duration of a process called delayed luminescence, in which microtubules and tubulins trapped light. Tuszyński suspects that the phenomenon has a quantum origin, with
superradiance being investigated as one possibility. In the second experiment,
Gregory D. Scholes and Aarat Kalra of
Princeton University used lasers to excite molecules within tubulins, causing a prolonged excitation to diffuse through microtubules further than expected, which did not occur when repeated under
anesthesia. However, diffusion results have to be interpreted carefully, since even classical diffusion can be very complex due to the wide range of length scales in the fluid filled extracellular space. Nevertheless,
University of Oxford quantum physicist
Vlatko Vedral told that this connection with consciousness is a really long shot. In addition, the tests were performed on microtubules
in tubo in a UV-Vis apparatus, with chemicals added that altered the electrical properties of the microtubules, without critical microtubule-associated proteins like ferritin that quench microtubule fluorescence, and with a number of other major substantive issues that render the tests inapplicable to neurons. Also in 2022, a group of Italian physicists conducted several experiments that failed to provide evidence in support of a gravity-related quantum collapse model of consciousness, weakening the possibility of a quantum explanation for consciousness. == Influence on brain function ==