The locked-in syndrome (LIS), in which persons are conscious but almost entirely paralyzed and voiceless, is one of the most dramatic states a human being can find himself or herself in. This interdisciplinary international workshop will bring together cognitive neuroscientists, care and neuro-rehabilitation professionals, brain-computer interface experts, individuals involved in LIS patients associations, philosophers, bioethicists, medical anthropologists and sociologists, and historians of the brain/mind sciences to discuss the impact this unique condition has on ways of understanding personhood at the theoretical and practical levels.
While the philosophy of personhood in the Western tradition since the late 17th century has emphasized cognitive capacities and self-consciousness, the experience of LIS contributes to open new ground for understanding how relationality, emotion, communication and phenomenal consciousness (the feeling of what it is like to be in a certain state) are constitutive of personal identity and the sense of self.
17 and 18 November 2016
Sala de Juntas, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras,
Autonomous University of Barcelona
PROGRAM
Thursday 17 November
10:00-11:00 h
Welcome. Organization and Introduction,
Fernando Vidal and Núria Terribas
11:00-11:30 h
The Self and the Person: A Distinction of Relevance for Patients with Locked-In Syndrome?
Dan Zahavi
11:30-12:00 h
Being Alive: An Enactive Approach to the Self,
Miriam Kyselo
12:00-12:30 h Discussion
12:30-14:00 h Lunch
14:00-14:30 h
Reconstructing and Realizing a Life Project in LIS: Conditions and Limits,
Véronique Blandin
14:30-15:00 h
Living with a Ventilator: A Japanese Perspective,
Yumiko Kawaguchi
15:00:15:30 h Discussion
15:30-15:45 h Break
15:45-16:15 h
The History of BCI (Brain-Computer Interface): From a Vision to Independent Home
Use by Locked-in Patients,
Andrea Kübler
16:15-16:45 h
BCI for Communication in Locked-in Syndromes: What is Needed to Match Users and Technology,
Donatella Mattia
16:45-17:00 h Break
17:00-17:30 h Discussion
Friday 18 November
10:00-10:30 h
Locked-in Patients/Lockedout Doctors: A History of Persistent States of Being There,
Stephen Casper
10:30-11:00 h
The Locked-in State as a Final Stage of Individuation: A Phenomenological and Qualitative Analysis of a Caregiver’s Narrative,
Yasuhiko Murakami
11:00-11:30 h Discussion
11:30-11:45 h Break
11:45-12:15 h
Which Factors Foster Resilience in the LIS?,
Marie-Christine Nizzi
12:15-12:45 h
Being Locked-In and the Paradox of Disability,
Bernabé Robles del Olmo
12:45-13:15 h Discussion
13:15-14:45 h Lunch
14:45-15:15 h
Locked-in Syndrome: The Soul Far From the Body,
Nicole Beaudoin
15:15-15:45 h
Life at Home Years After Hospital Discharge: “Bed of Roses” or “Rebel Without a cause”?
An Analysis of Breakdown Situations at Home,
Frédéric Pellas
15:45-16:15 h Discussion
16:15-17:00 h Break
17:00-17:30 h
Neuroethical Implications of Clinician’s Attitudes Toward the Locked-in Syndrome,
Athena Demertzi
17:30-18:00 h
Medical Decision Making by Patients with Locked-In Syndrome,
James L. Bernat
18:00-18:15 h Break
18:15-19:15 h Discussion + Closing