Authors:
            
                    Maurits van den Noort
                    
                        
                    
                    ; 
                
                    Kenneth Hugdahl
                    
                        
                    
                     and
                
                    Peggy Bosch
                    
                        
                    
                    
                
        
        
            Affiliation:
            
                    
                        
                    
                    University of Bergen, Norway
                
        
        
        
        
        
             Keyword(s):
            Consciousness, Quantum Physics, Unconscious Information Processing, Emotions, Consumer Behavior. 
        
        
            
                Related
                    Ontology
                    Subjects/Areas/Topics:
                
                        Enterprise Information Systems
                    ; 
                        Human Factors
                    ; 
                        Human-Computer Interaction
                    ; 
                        Physiological Computing Systems
                    
            
        
        
            
                Abstract: 
                The nature of unconscious human emotional information processing remains a great mystery. On the one hand, classical models view human conscious emotional information processing as computation among the brain’s neurons but fail to address its enigmatic features. On the other hand, quantum processes (superposition of states, nonlocality, and entanglement) also remain mysterious, yet are being harnessed in revolutionary information technologies like quantum computation, quantum cryptography, and quantum teleportation. In this paper, a behavioral- and two neuroimaging studies will be discussed that suggest a special role for unconscious emotional information processing in human interaction with other objects. Since this is a new research field; we are only beginning to understand quantum information processing in the human brain (Hameroff, 2006; Van den Noort and Bosch, 2006). This research is important since it could have important theoretical consequences in the way we understand phys
                ics and information processing in the brain. Moreover, it could lead to new information technologies and applications. For instance, it might give new insights on human consumer behavior (Dijksterhuis, 2004; Dijksterhuis, Bos, Nordgren, and Van Baaren, 2006a; 2006b), and lead to new commercial strategies for multinationals.
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