There are some Neuroscientists who believe that consciousness is amenable to study. Their basic supposition is that consciousness (awareness) is an emergent property of brain activity, that is, our conscious experience of life arises from the simultaneous activity of multiple brain areas in concert. Most of the brain's activity is not available to awareness (can never be called into consciousness); that is undeniable fact and I could digress into a very long description of why that is true if you want me to. The working neuroscientific model of consciousness is that networks of groups neurons, mostly in the cerebral cortex, acting as a unit, are responsible for constructing the image we see, the sounds we hear, etc.
Given the above premise, the goal of current experiments is to define which brain areas are active during "awareness". This involves surmounting two main hurdles.
1. localizing brain activity. This involves EEG and evoked potentials, positron emission tomography, functional MRI, or direct intracerebral electrical recording in awake subjects. You can see the obvious problem with the last, but the others all have attendant limitations.
2. You need an experimental paradigm which can compare conscious and unconscious states, with all other things being as equal as possible. That's also a tough nut to crack. Most of these experiments confound ATTENTION with AWARENESS, and indeed they may be inseparable.
Here is a summary tidbit of thoughts from Kouider and Dehaene, PhilTranRoySocB 2007 Vol362:857-875
"In this concluding section, we would like to argue that those results fit with the tripartite distinction of subliminal, preconscious and conscious processing that one of us has recently proposed (Dehaene et al. 2006). According to the global neuronal workspace theory, sensory information is consciously accessed whenever a bidirectional, self-sustained activation loop is estab- lished between the relevant posterior sensory processors and an assembly of workspace neurons with long-distance axons, distributed through the brain, but particularly dense in associative cortical areas, most notably prefrontal cortex (Dehaene et al. 1998, 2001, 2003). Thus, for a stimulus to reach consciousness, two factors are jointly needed: first, the input stimulus must have enough strength to cross a dynamic threshold for global reverberation (which can be prevented by stimulus degradation or competition with other stimuli, i.e. masking); and second, it must receive top-down amplification by distant neurons (which can be prevented by drawing these neurons into another stimulus or task). Accordingly, conscious access may fail for two quite distinct reasons, leading to a distinction between two types of non-conscious processes, which we call subliminal and preconscious, respectively (figure 3)."
A bidirectional self sustained activation loop...that's consciousness!