The Claim of the "J Space"; And the Parallel with Global Workspace Theory of Neuroscience
This claim has been presented as "A global workspace in language models" described at a high level here, and deep-dived in the paper Verbalizable Representations Form a Global Workspace in Language Models (July 6, 2026, Wes Gurnee, Nicholas Sonofriew, Jack Lindsey et al).
From the paper - it is clear that the analysis identifies "data structures of the mind" - where we replace with "mind" with "model" to get a window in on the model's thinking:
"we observe that language models maintain a privileged set of internal representations, available for report, modulation, and flexible internal reasoning, atop a much larger volume of automatic processing. We identify these representations using a new interpretability technique, which surfaces the concepts a model is poised to verbalize at any point in its processing".
What is interesting is the discovery of this so-called "J-Space" but also the interpretability technique. It offers a new way to "commune" with LLMs.
The phenomenon of "access consciousness" is described in the paper, a concept from behavioural and brain science. This is introduced as a purely functional notion - it's purported purpose is utilitarian, and not linked to subjective experience (sometimes called phenomenal consciousness).
Neuroscience has a global workspace theory where a "data structure" can be posted to the brain's "working set area" for use in reasoning and reporting.
The Evidence
The paper poses the question whether functional properties of a global workspace have emerged in LLMs. It portrays the LLM's thinking as a plethora of vector representations, some constituting low-level bookkeeping and some embodying higher level ideas like "Golden Gate Bridge" or even emotions. If such a workspace were to exist, we would expect a subtset of vectors to be prominently and preferentially present in the LLM's memory.
The Test for Presence
Verbal report - when asked what it is thinking about, LLM names concepts from its workspace
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