Andy Clark - "Prediction, Perception, and Imagination"
Duration: 21 mins
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Description: | This is a talk from Andy Clark (University of Edinburgh). It formed part of Session One of The Human Mind Conference, "Brain & World: Perception & Consciousness." |
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Created: | 2017-10-24 18:49 |
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Collection: | The Human Mind Conference |
Publisher: | University of Cambridge |
Copyright: | Andy Clark |
Language: | eng (English) |
Abstract: | According to an emerging vision in computational and cognitive neuroscience, perception (rich, full-blooded, world- presenting perception of the kind we humans enjoy) depends heavily on prediction. To perceive, if this schema is correct, is to meet incoming sensory information with a set of matching ‘top-down’ predictions – the brain’s best probabilistic guesses about the shape of the present sensory signal. This story suggests, intriguingly, that perception, understanding and imagination - which we might intuitively consider to be three distinct chunks of our mental machinery - are inextricably tied together, emerging as simultaneous results of that single underlying strategy. |
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