AUTHOR=Mogi Ken TITLE=Artificial intelligence, human cognition, and conscious supremacy JOURNAL=Frontiers in Psychology VOLUME=Volume 15 - 2024 YEAR=2024 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1364714 DOI=10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1364714 ISSN=1664-1078 ABSTRACT=The computational significance of consciousness is an important and potentially more tractable research theme compared to the hard problem of consciousness, although they could be ultimately related. In the literature, consciousness is defined as what it is like to be an agent (i.e. a human, a bat, etc.), with phenomenal properties such as qualia, intentionality, and self-awareness. The absence of these properties would be termed "unconscious". The recent success of Large Language Models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT has raised new questions as to the computational significance of human conscious processing. The AI effect is the cognitive tendency to regard anything achieved by artificial intelligence systems to be outside the domain of core human cognition, possibly separating AI from conscious information processing. Although instances from biological systems would typically suggest a robust correlation between intelligence and consciousness, certain states of consciousness seem to exist without manifest existence of intelligence. On the other hand, AI systems seem to exhibit intelligence without consciousness. These instances seem to suggest possible dissociations between consciousness and intelligence in natural as well as artificial systems. Here I review some salient ideas about the computational significance of human conscious processes, and identify several cognitive domains potentially unique to consciousness, such as flexible attention modulation, robust handling of new contexts, choice and decision making, cognition reflecting a wide spectrum of sensory information in an integrated manner, and lastly embodied cognition, which might involve unconscious processes as well. Compared to such cognitive tasks, characterized by flexible and ad hoc judgements and choices, adequately acquired knowledge and skills are typically processed unconsciously in humans, consistent with the view that computation exhibited by LLMs, which are pretrained on a large data set, could in principle be processed without consciousness, although conversations in humans are typically done consciously, with awareness of auditory qualia as well as the semantics of what are being said. I discuss the theoretically and practically important issue of separating computations which need to be conducted consciously from those which could be done unconsciously, in areas such as perception, language, and driving. I propose conscious supremacy as a concept analogous