4.5 Globalist versus Localist Representations 85 “inner domain in which we can rehearse telephone numbers to ourselves or, more interestingly, in which we carry on the narrative of our lives. It is usually thought to include inner speech and visual imagery.” Baars uses the term “consciousness” to refer to the contents of working memory — a theoretical commitment that is not part of the CogPrime design. In this section we will use the term “consciousness” in Baars’ way, but not throughout the rest of the book. Baars conceives working memory and consciousness in terms of a “theater metaphor” — ac- cording to which, in the “theater of consciousness” a “spotlight of selective attention” shines a bright spot on stage. The bright spot reveals the global workspace — the contents of con- sciousness, which may be metaphorically considered as a group of actors moving in and out of consciousness, making speeches or interacting with each other. The unconscious is represented by the audience watching the play ... and there is also a role for the director (the mind’s ex- ecutive processes) behind the scenes, along with a variety of helpers like stage hands, script writers, scene designers, etc. GWT describes a fleeting memory with a duration of a few seconds. This is much shorter than the 10-30 seconds of classical working memory — according to GWT there is a very brief “cognitive cycle” in which the global workspace is refreshed, and the time period an item remains in working memory generally spans a large number of these elementary “refresh” actions. GWT contents are proposed to correspond to what we are conscious of, and are said to be broadcast to a multitude of unconscious cognitive brain processes. Unconscious processes, operating in parallel, can form coalitions which can act as input processes to the global workspace. Each unconscious process is viewed as relating to certain goals, and seeking to get involved with coalitions that will get enough importance to become par