Travis, F.T., Arenander, A., DuBois,
D. (2004) Psychological and physiological characteristics of a
proposed object-referral/self-referral continuum of self-awareness.
Consciousness and Cognition, 13/2, 401-420.
Abstract: This research extends
and confirms recent brainwave findings that distinguished an individual's
sense-of-self along an Object-referral/Self-referral Continuum
of self-awareness. Subjects were interviewed and were given tests
measuring inner/outer orientation, moral reasoning, anxiety, and
personality. Scores on the psychological tests were factor analyzed.
The first unrotated PCA component of the test scores yielded a
"Consciousness Factor," analogous to the intelligence
"g" factor, which accounted for over half of the variance
among groups. Analysis of unstructured interviews of these subjects
revealed fundamentally different descriptions of self-awareness.
Individuals who described themselves in terms of concrete cognitive
and behavioral processes (predominantly Object-referral mode)
exhibited lower Consciousness Factor scores, lower frontal EEG
coherence, lower alpha and higher gamma power during tasks, and
less efficient cortical preparatory responses (contingent negative
variation). In contrast, individuals who described themselves
in terms of an abstract, independent sense-of-self underlying
thought, feeling and action (predominantly Self-referral mode)
exhibited higher Consciousness Factor scores, higher frontal coherence,
higher alpha and lower gamma power during tasks, and more efficient
cortical responses. These data suggest that definable states of
brain activity and subjective experiences exist, in addition to
waking, sleeping and dreaming, that may be operationally defined
by psychological and physiological measures along a continuum
of Object-referral/Self-referral Continuum of self-awareness.