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CONCEPT

Lantern Consciousness

Gopnik's name for the wide, diffuse, undirected awareness that characterizes the <em>child's</em> mind — illumination in every direction without pre-sorting the world into relevant and irrelevant.
Lantern consciousness is Alison Gopnik's term for the mode of awareness dominant in early childhood: a broad, diffuse illumination that attends to everything in the perceptual field with roughly equal salience. It is not a failure of attentional control but a sophisticated adaptation — the cognitive architecture of a mind whose task is to discover the structure of an unknown world rather than act efficiently in a known one. The lantern sees the beetle on the leaf, the shadow on the stone, the ant carrying something pale, all with the same intensity, because it does not yet know which features will turn out to matter. This wide, undirected awareness is what allows children to notice the anomaly that the adult spotlight has learned to screen out.

In The You On AI Field Guide

The empirical foundation for lantern consciousness rests on decades of research into the maturation of the prefrontal cortex, the brain region most responsible for focused, goal-directed attention. The prefrontal cortex is among the last regions to mature, reaching

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