33 results on '"enactive cognitive science"'
Search Results
2. Epilogue to "Questioning Life and Cognition" by John Stewart.
- Author
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Froese, Tom
- Subjects
- *
PROLOGUES & epilogues , *COGNITION , *INTERNET publishing , *EDUCATORS , *SCIENTIFIC community - Abstract
In 2012, John Stewart contributed a book manuscript entitled " Questioning Life and Cognition: Some Foundational Issues in the Paradigm of Enaction " to the Enaction Series in Online Collaborative Publishing, edited by Olivier Gapenne and Bruno Bachimont. Along with Mattéo Mossio, I was invited by Olivier to serve as a glossator of this text. The purpose was to thereby continue our long and fruitful dialogues with John that began when we were both students. I took advantage of the opportunity to also express my gratitude to John for his participation in that formative stage of my personal academic journey. My reflections were included as an epilogue to his book. In memoriam, the epilogue is reproduced in this report unchanged. I will always be grateful to John for making the research community of enaction feel like family to me and for helping me recognize that there is a place for my diverse interests in the continued pursuit of an academic career. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Social Authenticity: Towards a Heideggerian Analysis of Social Change
- Author
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Weichold, Martin, Tuomela, Raimo, Editor-in-chief, Schmid, Hans Bernhard, Managing editor, Hudin, Jennifer, Managing editor, and Thonhauser, Gerhard, editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Scaling-up skilled intentionality to linguistic thought.
- Author
-
Kiverstein, Julian and Rietveld, Erik
- Subjects
COGNITION ,MENTAL representation ,ECOLOGICAL niche ,COGNITIVE science ,ENVIRONMENTAL psychology - Abstract
Cognition has traditionally been understood in terms of internal mental representations, and computational operations carried out on internal mental representations. Radical approaches propose to reconceive cognition in terms of agent-environment dynamics. An outstanding challenge for such a philosophical project is how to scale-up from perception and action to cases of what is typically called 'higher-order' cognition such as linguistic thought, the case we focus on in this paper. Perception and action are naturally described in terms of agent-environment dynamics, but can a person's thoughts about absent, abstract or counterfactual states of affairs also be accounted for in such terms? We argue such a question will seem pressing so long as one fails to appreciate how richly resourceful the human ecological niche is in terms of the affordances it provides. The explanatory work that is supposedly done by mental representations in a philosophical analysis of cognition, can instead be done by looking outside of the head to the environment structured by sociomaterial practices, and the affordances it makes available. Once one recognizes how much of the human ecological niche has become structured by activities of talking and writing, this should take away at least some of the motivation for understanding linguistic thinking in terms of content-bearing internal representations. We'll argue that people can think about absent, abstract or counterfactual because of their skills for engaging with what we will call "enlanguaged affordances". We make use of the phenomenological analysis of speech in Merleau-Ponty to show how the multiple affordances an individual is ready to engage with in a particular situation will typically include enlanguaged affordances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Ecological-Enactive Model of Disability: Why Disability Does Not Entail Pathological Embodiment
- Author
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Juan Toro, Julian Kiverstein, and Erik Rietveld
- Subjects
disability ,medical model ,ecological psychology ,enactive cognitive science ,normality ,lived body ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
In the last 50 years, discussions of how to understand disability have been dominated by the medical and social models. Paradoxically, both models overlook the disabled person’s experience of the lived body, thus reducing the body of the disabled person to a physiological body. In this article we introduce what we call the Ecological-Enactive (EE) model of disability. The EE-model combines ideas from enactive cognitive science and ecological psychology with the aim of doing justice simultaneously to the lived experience of being disabled, and the physiological dimensions of disability. More specifically, we put the EE model to work to disentangle the concepts of disability and pathology. We locate the difference between pathological and normal forms of embodiment in the person’s capacity to adapt to changes in the environment. To ensure that our discussion remains in contact with lived experience, we draw upon phenomenological interviews we have carried out with people with Cerebral Palsy.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The Ecological-Enactive Model of Disability: Why Disability Does Not Entail Pathological Embodiment.
- Author
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Toro, Juan, Kiverstein, Julian, and Rietveld, Erik
- Subjects
PEOPLE with cerebral palsy ,ENVIRONMENTAL psychology ,DISABILITIES ,MEDICAL model ,ECOLOGY ,PEOPLE with disabilities - Abstract
In the last 50 years, discussions of how to understand disability have been dominated by the medical and social models. Paradoxically, both models overlook the disabled person's experience of the lived body, thus reducing the body of the disabled person to a physiological body. In this article we introduce what we call the Ecological-Enactive (EE) model of disability. The EE-model combines ideas from enactive cognitive science and ecological psychology with the aim of doing justice simultaneously to the lived experience of being disabled, and the physiological dimensions of disability. More specifically, we put the EE model to work to disentangle the concepts of disability and pathology. We locate the difference between pathological and normal forms of embodiment in the person's capacity to adapt to changes in the environment. To ensure that our discussion remains in contact with lived experience, we draw upon phenomenological interviews we have carried out with people with Cerebral Palsy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Why Dialogue is Effective in Schizophrenia Treatment: Insights from the Open Dialogue Approach and Enactive Cognitive Science
- Author
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Laura Galbusera and Miriam Kyselo
- Subjects
Schizophrenia ,Therapeutic Relationship ,Dialogical Stance ,Open Dialogue ,Enactive Cognitive Science ,Social Self ,Philosophy (General) ,B1-5802 - Abstract
In this paper we focus on the psychiatric approach of Open Dialogue (OD) and seek to explain why the intersubjective process of dialogue, one of OD’s core clinical principles, is effective in schizophrenia treatment. We address this question from an interdisciplinary viewpoint, by linking the OD approach with a theoretical account of the self as endorsed by enactive cognitive science. The paper is structured as follows: first, we introduce the OD approach and focus in particular on the principles that are characteristic of the dialogical therapeutic attitude. Second, we clarify our stance on the concept of schizophrenia by relying on insights from phenomenological psychiatry. Third, we introduce an enactive perspective on mental disorders, which elaborates on phenomenological psychiatry and conceives of the self as a self-organizing system, brought forth through interactional processes. Based on this enactive approach, we draw clinical implications for schizophrenia. In the fourth and final part, we propose conceptual bridges between the OD and the enactive approach by bringing to attention the intersubjective nature of the human self and the inherent vulnerability entailed in both the self’s maintenance and in the practice of dialogue. We then propose that the dialogical stance adopted by OD is effective in supporting the recovery of a balanced sense of self precisely because it provides an intersubjective space in which clients can safely experience and maintain the basic structures underlying the socially constituted self. Since our analysis touches upon fundamental structures of the therapeutic relationship, we hope that it will also be useful to inform general psychiatric practice and help advancing a more integrative understanding of psychotherapy for schizophrenia.
- Published
- 2019
8. Ecological approaches to perceptual learning: learning to perceive and perceiving as learning.
- Subjects
- *
PERCEPTUAL learning , *ENVIRONMENTAL psychology , *EVOLUTIONARY developmental biology , *DEVELOPMENTAL biology , *COGNITIVE science , *LEARNING strategies - Abstract
In this theoretical review article, our primary goal is to contribute to the post-cognitivist understanding of learning to perceive and perceiving as learning, by discussing a framework for perception and perceptual learning initiated by James J Gibson, and extended by Eleanor J Gibson and others. This Ecological Psychology has a coherent set of assumptions based on the concept of mutualism between the perceiving organism and its surroundings, and the idea of affordances as action possibilities of the surround that are perceptible by the organism. At the same time, Ecological Psychology, broadly construed, consists of different perspectives that take different routes to address questions related to the core concepts of perceptual learning. In this article, we focus on three theoretical stances within Ecological Psychology on the issue of perceptual learning: that of Eleanor J Gibson, the current theory of direct learning by Jacobs and Michaels, and the "organicist" approach based on ideas of organicist biology and developments in evolutionary biology. We consider perceptual learning as embedded in development and evolution, and we explore perceptual learning in more depth in the context of tool use and language development. We also discuss the relation between Ecological Psychology and Enactivism on the nature of perception. In conclusion, we summarize the benefits of Ecological Psychology, as a robust but still developing post-cognitivist framework, for the study of perceptual learning and cognitive science in general. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The feeling of grip: novelty, error dynamics, and the predictive brain.
- Author
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Kiverstein, Julian, Miller, Mark, and Rietveld, Erik
- Subjects
BIOENERGETICS ,DERIVATIVES (Mathematics) ,COGNITIVE science ,BRAIN ,INTEROCEPTION - Abstract
According to the free energy principle biological agents resist a tendency to disorder in their interactions with a dynamically changing environment by keeping themselves in sensory and physiological states that are expected given their embodiment and the niche they inhabit (Friston in Nat Rev Neurosci 11(2):127–138, 2010. doi:10.1038/nrn2787). Why would a biological agent that aims at minimising uncertainty in its encounters with the world ever be motivated to seek out novelty? Novelty for such an agent would arrive in the form of sensory and physiological states that are unexpected. Such an agent ought therefore to avoid novel and surprising interactions with the world one might think. Yet humans and many other animals find play and other forms of novelty-seeking and exploration hugely rewarding. How can this be understood in frameworks for studying the mind that emphasise prediction error minimisation? This problem has been taken up in recent research concerned with epistemic action—actions an agent engages in to reduce uncertainty. However that work leaves two questions unanswered, which it is the aim of our paper to address. First, no account has been given yet of why it should feel good to the agent to engage the world playfully and with curiosity. Second an appeal is made to precision-estimation to explain epistemic action, yet it remains unclear how precision-weighting works in action more generally, or active inference. We argue that an answer to both questions may lie in the bodily states of an agent that track the rate at which free energy is being reduced. The recent literature on the predictive brain has connected the valence of emotional experiences to the rate of change in the reduction of prediction error (Joffily and Coricelli in PLoS Comput Biol 9(6):e1003094, 2013. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003094; Van de Cruys, in Metzinger and Wiese (eds) Philosophy and predictive processing, vol 24, MIND Group, Frankfurt am Main, 2017. doi:10.15502/9783958573253). In this literature valenced emotional experiences are hypothesised to be identical with changes in the rate at which prediction error is reduced. Experiences are negatively valenced when overall prediction error increases and are positively valenced when the sum of prediction errors decrease. We offer an ecological-enactive interpretation of the concept of valence and its connection to rate of change of prediction error. We show how rate of change should be understood in terms of embodied states of affordance-related action readiness. We then go on to apply this ecological-enactive account of error dynamics to provide an answer to the first question we have raised: It may explain why it should feel good to an agent to be curious and playful. Our ecological-enactive account also allows us to show how error dynamics may provide an answer to the second question we have raised regarding how precision-weighting works in active inference. An agent that is sensitive to rates of error reduction can tune precision on the fly. We show how this ability to tune precision on the go can allow agents to develop skills for adapting better and better to the unexpected, and search out opportunities for resolving uncertainty and progressing in its learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Making sense of the chronology of Paleolithic cave painting from the perspective of material engagement theory.
- Author
-
Froese, Tom
- Abstract
There exists a venerable tradition of interdisciplinary research into the origins and development of Paleolithic cave painting. In recent years this research has begun to be inflected by rapid advances in measurement techniques that are delivering chronological data with unprecedented accuracy. Patterns are emerging from the accumulating evidence whose precise interpretation demands corresponding advances in theory. It seems that cave painting went through several transitions, beginning with the creation of simple lines, dots and disks, followed by hand stencils, then by outlined figures, and finally by naturalistic figures. So far the most systematic evidence comes from Europe, although there are also indications that this sequence could be a universal pattern. The shamanic hypothesis provides a useful theoretical starting point because of its emphasis on the role of performance and phenomenology in the creative process. However, it still tends to reduce this sequence to mere stylistic and thematic changes that were external products of an already fully formed modern mind. Here I show how key insights from semiotics and material engagement theory can advance this explanatory framework to the extent that we become able to postdict the major transitions in the chronology of Paleolithic cave painting. An intriguing implication is that this is at the same time a chronology of cognitive changes, namely from a performative-phenomenological to a reflective-representational mind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Thinking through enactive agency: sense-making, bio-semiosis and the ontologies of organismic worlds.
- Author
-
De Jesus, Paulo
- Abstract
According to enactivism all living systems, from single cell organisms to human beings, are ontologically endowed with some form of teleological and sense-making agency. Furthermore, enactivists maintain that: (i) there is no fixed pregiven world and as a consequence (ii) all organisms "bring forth" their own unique "worlds" through processes of sense-making. The first half of the paper takes these two ontological claims as its central focus and aims to clarify and make explicit the arguments and motivations underlying them. Our analysis here highlights three distinct but connected problems for enactivism: (i) these arguments do not and cannot guarantee that there is no pregiven world, instead, they (ii) end up generating a contradiction whereby a pregiven world seems to in fact be tacitly presupposed by virtue of (iii) a reliance on a tacit epistemic perspectivalism which is also inherently representationalist and as a consequence makes it difficult to satisfactorily account for the ontological plurality of worlds. Taking these considerations on board, the second half of the paper then aims to develop a more robust ontologically grounded enactivism. Drawing from biosemiotic enactivism, science and technology studies and anthropology, the paper aims to present an account which both rejects a pregiven world and coherently accounts for how organisms bring forth ontologically multiple worlds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Split-brain syndrome and extended perceptual consciousness.
- Author
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Downey, Adrian
- Abstract
In this paper I argue that split-brain syndrome is best understood within an extended mind framework and, therefore, that its very existence provides support for an externalist account of conscious perception. I begin by outlining the experimental aberration model of split-brain syndrome and explain both: why this model provides the best account of split-brain syndrome; and, why it is commonly rejected. Then, I summarise Susan Hurley’s argument that split-brain subjects could unify their conscious perceptual field by using external factors to stand-in for the missing corpus callosum. I next provide an argument that split-brain subjects do unify their perceptual fields via external factors. Finally, I explain why my account provides one with an experimental aberration model which avoids the problems typically levelled at such views, and highlight some empirical predictions made by the account. The nature of split-brain syndrome has long been considered mysterious by proponents of internalist accounts of consciousness. However, in this paper I argue that externalist theories can provide a straightforward explanation of the condition. I therefore conclude that the ability of externalist accounts to explain split-brain syndrome gives us strong reason to prefer them over internalist rivals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Scaling-up skilled intentionality to linguistic thought
- Author
-
Erik Rietveld, Julian Kiverstein, APH - Mental Health, APH - Health Behaviors & Chronic Diseases, ANS - Compulsivity, Impulsivity & Attention, Adult Psychiatry, and Philosophy
- Subjects
Counterfactual thinking ,Skilled intentionality ,050105 experimental psychology ,Gibson ,Ecological psychology ,Expressive theory of linguistic meaning ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,0302 clinical medicine ,Radical theories of cognition ,Speech ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Linguistic relativity ,Affordance ,Merleau-Ponty ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Cognition ,Linguistic thought ,Linguistics ,Philosophy ,Action (philosophy) ,Philosophical analysis ,Mental representation ,symbols ,Enactive cognitive science ,Psychology ,Affordances ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Cognition has traditionally been understood in terms of internal mental representations, and computational operations carried out on internal mental representations. Radical approaches propose to reconceive cognition in terms of agent-environment dynamics. An outstanding challenge for such a philosophical project is how to scale-up from perception and action to cases of what is typically called ‘higher-order’ cognition such as linguistic thought, the case we focus on in this paper. Perception and action are naturally described in terms of agent-environment dynamics, but can a person’s thoughts about absent, abstract or counterfactual states of affairs also be accounted for in such terms? We argue such a question will seem pressing so long as one fails to appreciate how richly resourceful the human ecological niche is in terms of the affordances it provides. The explanatory work that is supposedly done by mental representations in a philosophical analysis of cognition, can instead be done by looking outside of the head to the environment structured by sociomaterial practices, and the affordances it makes available. Once one recognizes how much of the human ecological niche has become structured by activities of talking and writing, this should take away at least some of the motivation for understanding linguistic thinking in terms of content-bearing internal representations. We’ll argue that people can think about absent, abstract or counterfactual because of their skills for engaging with what we will call “enlanguaged affordances”. We make use of the phenomenological analysis of speech in Merleau-Ponty to show how the multiple affordances an individual is ready to engage with in a particular situation will typically include enlanguaged affordances.
- Published
- 2021
14. The sense of agency - a phenomenological consequence of enacting sensorimotor schemes.
- Author
-
Buhrmann, Thomas and Di Paolo, Ezequiel
- Abstract
The sensorimotor approach to perception addresses various aspects of perceptual experience, but not the subjectivity of intentional action. Conversely, the problem that current accounts of the sense of agency deal with is primarily one of subjectivity. But the proposed models, based on internal signal comparisons, arguably fail to make the transition from subpersonal computations to personal experience. In this paper we suggest an alternative direction towards explaining the sense of agency by braiding three theoretical strands: a world-involving, dynamical interpretation of the sensorimotor approach, an enactive description of sensorimotor agency as contrasted with organic agency in general, and a dynamical theory of equilibration within and between sensorimotor schemes. On this new account, the sense of oneself as the author of one's own actions corresponds to what we experience during the ongoing adventure of establishing, losing, and re-establishing meaningful interactions with the world. The meaningful relation between agent and world is given by the precarious constitution of sensorimotor agency as a self-asserting network of schemes and dispositions. Acts are owned as they adaptively assert the constitution of the agent. Thus, awareness for different aspects of agency experience, such as the initiation of action, the effort exerted in controlling it, or the achievement of the desired effect, can be accounted for by processes involved in maintaining the sensorimotor organization that enables these interactions with the world. We discuss these processes in detail from a non-representational, dynamical perspective and show how they cohere with the personal experience of agency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Book Review: Contemporary Sensorimotor Theory
- Author
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Tom eFroese and Franklenin eSierra
- Subjects
Consciousness ,Hard Problem of Consciousness ,Cognitive Robotics ,Perception-Action Coupling ,sensorimotor approach to perception ,enactive cognitive science ,Mechanical engineering and machinery ,TJ1-1570 ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,QA75.5-76.95 - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. From enactive phenomenology to biosemiotic enactivism.
- Author
-
De Jesus, Paulo
- Subjects
- *
PHENOMENOLOGY , *BIOSEMIOTICS , *ANTHROPOCENTRISM , *ANTHROPOMORPHISM , *COGNITIVE science - Abstract
Autopoietic enactivism (AE) is a relatively young but increasingly influential approach within embodied cognitive science, which aims to offer a viable alternative framework to mainstream cognitivism. Similarly, in biology, the nascent field of biosemiotics has steadily been developing an increasingly influential alternative framework to mainstream biology. Despite sharing common objectives and clear theoretical overlap, there has to date been little to no exchange between the two fields. This paper takes this under-appreciated overlap as not only a much needed call to begin building bridges between the two areas but also as an opportunity to explore how AE could benefit from biosemiotics. As a first tentative step towards this end, the paper will draw from both fields to develop a novel synthesis – biosemiotic enactivism – which aims to clarify, develop and ultimately strengthen some key AE concepts. The paper has two main goals: (i) to propose a novel conception of cognition that could contribute to the ongoing theoretical developments of AE and (ii) to introduce some concepts and ideas from biosemiotics to the enactive community in order to stimulate further debate across the two fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The feeling of grip
- Author
-
Erik Rietveld, Julian Kiverstein, Mark R. Miller, APH - Mental Health, APH - Health Behaviors & Chronic Diseases, ANS - Compulsivity, Impulsivity & Attention, Adult Psychiatry, ILLC (FGw), and Logic and Language (ILLC, FNWI/FGw)
- Subjects
Computer science ,Energy (esotericism) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Predictive processing ,Inference ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,050105 experimental psychology ,Error dynamics ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Epistemic value ,Valence (psychology) ,media_common ,Emotion ,05 social sciences ,Novelty ,General Social Sciences ,06 humanities and the arts ,Epistemology ,Embodied cognition ,Exploit-explore dilemma ,Philosophy ,Action (philosophy) ,Feeling ,Curiosity ,060302 philosophy ,Free energy principle ,Enactive cognitive science ,Cognitive psychology ,Decision-making - Abstract
According to the free energy principle biological agents resist a tendency to disorder in their interactions with a dynamically changing environment by keeping themselves in sensory and physiological states that are expected given their embodiment and the niche they inhabit (Friston in Nat Rev Neurosci 11(2):127–138, 2010. doi: 10.1038/nrn2787 ). Why would a biological agent that aims at minimising uncertainty in its encounters with the world ever be motivated to seek out novelty? Novelty for such an agent would arrive in the form of sensory and physiological states that are unexpected. Such an agent ought therefore to avoid novel and surprising interactions with the world one might think. Yet humans and many other animals find play and other forms of novelty-seeking and exploration hugely rewarding. How can this be understood in frameworks for studying the mind that emphasise prediction error minimisation? This problem has been taken up in recent research concerned with epistemic action—actions an agent engages in to reduce uncertainty. However that work leaves two questions unanswered, which it is the aim of our paper to address. First, no account has been given yet of why it should feel good to the agent to engage the world playfully and with curiosity. Second an appeal is made to precision-estimation to explain epistemic action, yet it remains unclear how precision-weighting works in action more generally, or active inference. We argue that an answer to both questions may lie in the bodily states of an agent that track the rate at which free energy is being reduced. The recent literature on the predictive brain has connected the valence of emotional experiences to the rate of change in the reduction of prediction error (Joffily and Coricelli in PLoS Comput Biol 9(6):e1003094, 2013. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003094 ; Van de Cruys, in Metzinger and Wiese (eds) Philosophy and predictive processing, vol 24, MIND Group, Frankfurt am Main, 2017. doi: 10.15502/9783958573253 ). In this literature valenced emotional experiences are hypothesised to be identical with changes in the rate at which prediction error is reduced. Experiences are negatively valenced when overall prediction error increases and are positively valenced when the sum of prediction errors decrease. We offer an ecological-enactive interpretation of the concept of valence and its connection to rate of change of prediction error. We show how rate of change should be understood in terms of embodied states of affordance-related action readiness. We then go on to apply this ecological-enactive account of error dynamics to provide an answer to the first question we have raised: It may explain why it should feel good to an agent to be curious and playful. Our ecological-enactive account also allows us to show how error dynamics may provide an answer to the second question we have raised regarding how precision-weighting works in active inference. An agent that is sensitive to rates of error reduction can tune precision on the fly. We show how this ability to tune precision on the go can allow agents to develop skills for adapting better and better to the unexpected, and search out opportunities for resolving uncertainty and progressing in its learning.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The worldly constituents of perceptual presence
- Author
-
Ezequiel Alejandro Di Paolo
- Subjects
predictive coding ,Dynamical Systems Theory ,sensorimotor contingencies ,enactive cognitive science ,Perceptual presence ,counterfactual richness ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Beyond neurophenomenology: A review of Colombetti's The Feeling Body.
- Author
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Froese, Tom
- Subjects
- *
NEUROPSYCHOLOGY , *SENSEMAKING theory (Communication) , *EMOTIONS , *NEUROSCIENCES - Abstract
I review The Feeling Body : Affective Science Meets the Enactive Mind by Giovanna Colombetti (Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 2014, 288 pages, $40.00 hardcover). In this book Colombetti draws on the enactive theory of organismic embodiment and its key concept of sense-making in order to critically evaluate various aspects of mainstream affective science, including basic emotions and alternative constructionist approaches, as well as the cognitivist approach to emotion and appraisal theory. She defends and develops a dynamical systems approach to emotions and emphasizes the need for including more first-person methods of consciousness science in mainstream affective neuroscience. These are valuable contributions to affective science, and they also advance enactive theory. Colombetti's proposal goes further than standard neurophenomenology in that she appeals to the bodily basis of feeling, thereby requiring a new sort of neuro-physio-phenomenology. Even more radically, she allows that all living beings are essentially affective beings, even those without a nervous system, and that emotional forms could be co-constituted by more than one person. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Alliance: a common factor of psychotherapy modeled by structural theory.
- Author
-
Tschacher, Wolfgang, Haken, Hermann, and Kyselo, Miriam
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY methodology ,META-analysis ,EXPERIENTIAL psychotherapy for children ,SYNERGETICS ,COGNITIVE ability in science ,RELAXATION for health ,FOKKER-Planck equation - Abstract
There is broad consensus that the therapeutic alliance constitutes a core common factor for all modalities of psychotherapy. Meta-analyses corroborated that alliance, as it emerges from therapeutic process, is a significant predictor of therapy outcome. Psychotherapy process is traditionally described and explored using two categorically different approaches, the experiential (first-person) perspective and the behavioral (third-person) perspective. We propose to add to this duality a third, structural approach. Dynamical systems theory and synergetics on the one hand and enactivist theory on the other together can provide this structural approach, which contributes in specific ways to a clarification of the alliance factor. Systems theory offers concepts and tools for the modeling of the individual self and, building on this, of alliance processes. In the enactive perspective, the self is conceived as a socially enacted autonomous system that strives to maintain identity by observing a two-fold goal: to exist as an individual self in its own right (distinction) while also being open to others (participation). Using this conceptualization, we formalized the therapeutic alliance as a phase space whose potentialminima (attractors) can be shifted by the therapist to approximate therapy goals. This mathematical formalization is derived from probability theory and synergetics. We draw the conclusion that structural theory provides powerful tools for the modeling of how therapeutic change is staged by the formation, utilization, and dissolution of the therapeutic alliance. In addition, we point out novel testable hypotheses and future applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Ecological-Enactive Model of Disability:Why Disability Does Not Entail Pathological Embodiment
- Author
-
Toro, Juan, Kiverstein, Julian, Rietveld, Erik, Toro, Juan, Kiverstein, Julian, and Rietveld, Erik
- Abstract
In the last 50 years, discussions of how to understand disability have been dominated by the medical and social models. Paradoxically, both models overlook the disabled person’s experience of the lived body, thus reducing the body of the disabled person to a physiological body. In this article we introduce what we call the Ecological-Enactive (EE) model of disability. The EE-model combines ideas from enactive cognitive science and ecological psychology with the aim of doing justice simultaneously to the lived experience of being disabled, and the physiological dimensions of disability. More specifically, we put the EE model to work to disentangle the concepts of disability and pathology. We locate the difference between pathological and normal forms of embodiment in the person’s capacity to adapt to changes in the environment. To ensure that our discussion remains in contact with lived experience, we draw upon phenomenological interviews we have carried out with people with Cerebral Palsy.
- Published
- 2020
22. Can the revolution be optimised? Oh yes it can! But, maybe not. Report on the one day symposium on “Varieties of Enactivism”.
- Author
-
De Jesus, Paulo
- Subjects
- *
PARADIGM (Theory of knowledge) , *COGNITIVE science , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *MATHEMATICAL optimization , *TIME - Abstract
The “Varieties of Enactivism: A Conceptual Geography” 4th April 2014, was a one day symposium which took place at Goldsmith University, London. The symposium had the explicit aim of clarifying the status of enactive cognitive science both as a unified paradigm for cognitive science and in relation to the broader embodied cognition framework. In what follows I offer a brief summery of the various talks followed by some thoughts on the current state of play within enactivism. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Are altered states of consciousness detrimental, neutral or helpful for the origins of symbolic cognition? A response to Hodgson and Lewis-Williams.
- Author
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Froese, Tom, Woodward, Alexander, and Ikegami, Takashi
- Subjects
- *
TURING machines , *ILLUSION (Philosophy) , *SELF-evaluation , *ARTISTIC anatomy , *NEURAL stimulation , *SOCIAL development - Abstract
We respond to the commentaries by Hodgson and Lewis-Williams by clarifying the novelty of our theory. We argue that whenever Turing instabilities of neural activity play a role in generating visual hallucinations, they do more than shape the geometric patterns. Their relatively autonomous self-organization is a source of intrinsic value related to their self-maintenance as a pattern of activity, and they would also thereby decouple “higher-level” stages of neural processing from external stimulation, thus facilitating a more abstract mode of cognition. These additional features of our proposal support Hodgson and Lewis-Williams in their respective theories about the very first origins of human artistic activity. We also evaluate the critical literature regarding the possibility of ritualized enaction of altered states of consciousness (ASC) in early prehistory. We conclude that ASC were indeed possible, and suggest that they were likely involved in facilitating the social development of more symbolic forms of life and mind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Steps to a “Properly Embodied” cognitive science
- Author
-
Stapleton, Mog
- Subjects
- *
COGNITIVE science , *EMOTIONS , *BEHAVIORISM (Psychology) , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *COGNITIVE ability , *COGNITION - Abstract
Abstract: Cognitive systems research has predominantly been guided by the historical distinction between emotion and cognition, and has focused its efforts on modelling the “cognitive” aspects of behaviour. While this initially meant modelling only the control system of cognitive creatures, with the advent of “embodied” cognitive science this expanded to also modelling the interactions between the control system and the external environment. What did not seem to change with this embodiment revolution, however, was the attitude towards affect and emotion in cognitive science. This paper argues that cognitive systems research is now beginning to integrate these aspects of natural cognitive systems into cognitive science proper, not in virtue of traditional “embodied cognitive science”, which focuses predominantly on the body’s gross morphology, but rather in virtue of research into the interoceptive, organismic basis of natural cognitive systems. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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25. From Cybernetics to Second-Order Cybernetics: A Comparative Analysis of Their Central Ideas.
- Author
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Froese, Tom
- Subjects
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CYBERNETICS research , *COGNITIVE science , *HISTORY of information science , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *HISTORICAL analysis , *COMPARATIVE studies , *TRUTHFULNESS & falsehood , *PARADIGM (Theory of knowledge) , *SYSTEMS theory , *HISTORY - Abstract
Context • The enactive paradigm in the cognitive sciences is establishing itself as a strong and comprehensive alternative to the computationalist mainstream. However, its own particular historical roots have so far been largely ignored in the historical analyses of the cognitive sciences. > Problem • In order to properly assess the enactive paradigm's theoretical foundations in terms of their validity, novelty and potential future directions of development, it is essential for us to know more about the history of ideas that has led to the current state of affairs. > Method • The meaning of the disappearance of the field of cybernetics and the rise of second-order cybernetics is analyzed by taking a closer look at the work of representative figures for each of the phases - Rosenblueth, Wiener and Bigelow for the early wave of cybernetics, Ashby for its culmination, and von Foerster for the development of the second-order approach. > Results • It is argued that the disintegration of cybernetics eventually resulted in two distinct scientific traditions, one going from symbolic AI to modern cognitive science on the one hand, and the other leading from second-order cybernetics to the current enactive paradigm. > Implications • We can now understand that the extent to which the cognitive sciences have neglected their cybernetic parent is precisely the extent to which cybernetics had already carried the tendencies that would later find fuller expression in second-order cybernetics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
26. Reflective practice in the heart of training and competition: the course of experience analysis for enhancing elite acrobatics athletes' performances.
- Author
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Hauw, Denis
- Subjects
- *
ACROBATICS , *ELITE athletes , *ATHLETE training , *INTROSPECTION , *GYMNASTICS - Abstract
This paper presents a particular form of reflective practice used with elite French acrobatics athletes since 1999. The practice is based on course-of-experience theory, which provides a methodology for analysing athletes' activity in relation to the stream of their situated and pre-reflexive consciousness that emerges during performance. Traces of past activity and self-confrontational interviews provide the elements of this experience, as well as support for the reflective practice in articulation with training. Five orientations for intervening to enhance performance shape the process of learning or help athletes with performance blocks are identified and illustrated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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27. The ethics in Japanese information society: Consideration on Francisco Varela’s The Embodied Mind from the perspective of fundamental informatics.
- Author
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Nishigaki, Toru
- Abstract
The ethics in an information society is discussed from the combined viewpoint of Eastern and Western thoughts. The breakdown of a coherent self threatens the Western ethics and causes nihilism. Francisco Varela, one of the founders of Autopoiesis Theory, tackled this problem and proposed Enactive Cognitive Science by introducing Buddhist middle-way philosophy. Fundamental Informatics gives further insights into the problem, by proposing the concept of a hierarchical autopoietic system. Here the ethics can be described in relation to a community rather than a coherent self. The philosophical bridge between East and West is expected to solve the ethical aporia in the 21st century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Book Review: Embodiment, Enaction, and Culture: Investigating the Constitution of the Shared World
- Author
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Tom Froese
- Subjects
Philosophy of mind ,sociology ,Constitution ,Social perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,philosophy of mind ,social perception ,social cognition ,Book Review ,Epistemology ,Phenomenology (philosophy) ,lcsh:Psychology ,embodied cognition ,Social cognition ,Embodied cognition ,Psychology ,phenomenology ,anthropology ,enactive cognitive science ,General Psychology ,media_common - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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29. Book Review: Contemporary Sensorimotor Theory
- Author
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Froese, Tom and Sierra, Franklenin
- Subjects
Robotics and AI ,perceptual consciousness ,hard problem of consciousness ,sensorimotor approach to perception ,perception-action coupling ,consciousness ,enactive cognitive science ,cognitive robotics - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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30. Alliance: a common factor of psychotherapy modeled by structural theory
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Miriam Kyselo, Hermann Haken, and Wolfgang Tschacher
- Subjects
Mathematical psychology ,Psychotherapist ,relaxation times ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,Structural theory ,mathematical psychology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Systems theory ,Hypothesis and Theory ,Psychology ,General Psychology ,Modalities ,common factors ,Conceptualization ,Self ,synchrony ,Fokker-Planck equation ,dynamical systems ,self-organization ,psychotherapy ,lcsh:Psychology ,Alliance ,chemistry ,attractor dynamics ,synergetics ,Synergetics (Haken) ,enactive cognitive science - Abstract
There is broad consensus that the therapeutic alliance constitutes a core common factor for all modalities of psychotherapy. Meta-analyses corroborated that alliance, as it emerges from therapeutic process, is a significant predictor of therapy outcome. Psychotherapy process is traditionally described and explored using two categorically different approaches, the experiential (first-person) perspective and the behavioral (third-person) perspective. We propose to add to this duality a third, structural approach. Dynamical systems theory and synergetics on the one hand and enactivist theory on the other together can provide this structural approach, which contributes in specific ways to a clarification of the alliance factor. Systems theory offers concepts and tools for the modeling of the individual self and, building on this, of alliance processes. In the enactive perspective, the self is conceived as a socially enacted autonomous system that strives to maintain identity by observing a two-fold goal: to exist as an individual self in its own right (distinction) while also being open to others (participation). Using this conceptualization, we formalized the therapeutic alliance as a phase space whose potential minima (attractors) can be shifted by the therapist to approximate therapy goals. This mathematical formalization is derived from probability theory and synergetics. We draw the conclusion that structural theory provides powerful tools for the modeling of how therapeutic change is staged by the formation, utilization, and dissolution of the therapeutic alliance. In addition, we point out novel testable hypotheses and future applications.
- Published
- 2015
31. Book Review: Embodiment, Enaction, and Culture: Investigating the Constitution of the Shared World.
- Author
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Froese, Tom
- Subjects
CULTURE ,HUMAN behavior ,SOCIAL perception ,COGNITIVE science ,THEORY of mind ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,SOCIOLOGY ,ANTHROPOLOGY - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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32. The worldly constituents of perceptual presence
- Author
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Lógica y filosofía de la ciencia, Logika eta zientziaren filosofia, Di Paolo, Ezequiel, Lógica y filosofía de la ciencia, Logika eta zientziaren filosofia, and Di Paolo, Ezequiel
- Published
- 2014
33. The worldly constituents of perceptual presence.
- Author
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Di Paolo, Ezequiel A. and Seth, Anil K.
- Subjects
SYNESTHESIA ,SENSITIVITY (Personality trait) ,SENSORIMOTOR cortex ,PERCEPTUAL motor learning ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The author discusses the theory of sensorimotor contingencies and explains the perceptual presence in synesthesia. Topics discussed include arrangements between predictive perception (PP) probabilistic model and sensorimotor contingencies theory, factors that affects sensitivity and virtuality, and actual sensorimotor trajectory.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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