Abstract
D. Pollen and M. Trachtenberg proposed the holographic brain theory to help explain the existence of photographic memories in some people. They suggested that such individuals had more vivid memories because they somehow could access a very large region of their memory holograms. Hameroff suggested in his paper that cylindrical neuronal microtubule cavities, or centrioles, function as waveguides for the evanescent photons for quantum signal processing. The supposition is that microtubular structures of the brain function as a coherent fiber bundle set used to store holographic images, as would a fiber-optic holographic system. In this paper, the author proposes that superluminal photons propagating inside the microtubules via evanescent waves could provide the access needed to record or retrieve a quantum coherent entangled holographic memory. © 2012 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
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CITATION STYLE
Musha, T. (2012). Holographic view of the brain memory mechanism based on evanescent superluminal photons. Information (Switzerland), 3(3), 344–350. https://doi.org/10.3390/info3030344
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