Table of Contents

BRAIN INFORMATION PROCESSING: CONSCIOUS VS. UNCONSCIOUS

The human brain processes all incoming stimuli through mechanisms that are fundamentally either conscious or unconscious (non-conscious). The vast majority of this work is handled unconsciously.

The Information Bottleneck

The major principle in information processing is the massive discrepancy between sensory input and conscious output, highlighting the brain's “massive filtering” job.

* TOTAL SENSORY INPUT: Estimated at approximately 11 million bits per second (bps). This figure represents the physical data capacity of all sensory organs combined. * CONSCIOUS THROUGHPUT: The rate of information processed during deliberate thought, focused attention, and decision-making is drastically lower, estimated between 10 to 50 bps.

Estimated Sensory Input Rates

The total $\sim 11$ million bps figure is derived from estimates of the maximum resolution capacity of each primary sensory channel:

Sensory System Estimated Bits Per Second (bps)
Eyes (Vision) 10,000,000
Skin (Touch) 1,000,000
Ears (Hearing) 100,000
Smell 100,000
Taste 1,000

Unconscious Role

The unconscious mind is the high-speed filter, handling automatic processing, filtering out non-essential data, and performing complex pattern recognition outside of awareness.

🧠 Related Concepts

Subliminal Information: Even information presented to the senses to swiftly to register on conscious awareness (subliminal stimuli) can still be processed by the unconscious mind and leave an imprint. Automatic vs. Controlled Processing: Unconscious processing is generally automatic (fast, involuntary), while conscious processing is controlled (slow, voluntary, requires effort). The “Sliptun”: Your invented term for a slip of the tongue (a common concept called a Freudian slip) is a great example of the unconscious influencing the conscious. A sliptun is when an underlying thought or feeling, rooted in unconscious processing, accidentally intrudes upon the conscious stream of speech, causing you to say the opposite of what you intended.

🧠 Memory Formation: From Input to Storage

Memory is not a single process; it's a system involving encoding, storage, and retrieval. The process moves through distinct stages, often referred to as the Multi-Store Model or similar structural frameworks.

1. Sensory Memory (Unconscious)

2. Short-Term Memory (STM) / Working Memory (Conscious Spotlight)

3. Long-Term Memory (LTM) (Unconscious Storage)

Key Role of Sleep (Consolidation): The physical and chemical changes that solidify memories into LTM (consolidation) largely happen unconsciously while you sleep.

😴 Dreaming: The Unconscious Narrative

Dreaming is the most profound example of the unconscious mind generating complex, vivid, and emotional content in the total absence of external sensory input or conscious control.

1. State of Consciousness

2. The Unconscious Engine

3. Conscious Recall