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By default, Find returns all publications that contain the words in the surnames of their author, in their titles, or in their years. For example,
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Ataria Y. (2015) Trauma from an enactive perspective: The collapse of the knowing-how structure. Adaptive Behavior 23(3): 143–154.
Ataria Y.
(
2015
)
Trauma from an enactive perspective: The collapse of the knowing-how structure.
Adaptive Behavior
23(3): 143–154.
Copy Ref
At present, due in part to our insufficient understanding of the traumatic experience, we are unable to account for the fact that while some people develop post-traumatic symptoms following a traumatic event, others do not. This article suggests that by adopting the enactive approach to perception – according to which perceiving is a way of acting – we may be able to improve our understanding of the traumatic experience and the factors which result in the development of post-traumatic symptoms. The central argument presented in this paper is that when the options of flight or fight are unavailable as a coping/defense mechanism, one freezes (freeze response). In this situation, the ability to master one’s movements is damaged and, in radical cases, the ability to move is lost altogether; as a result the sensorimotor loop may collapse. This, in turn, leads to distorted perception and, in consequence, memory disorders may develop.
Key words:
trauma
,
ptsd
,
enactivism
,
knowing-how
,
freeze response
,
dissociation
Ataria Y. (2015) Where do we end and where does the world begin? The case of insight meditation. Philosophical Psychology 28(8): 1128–1146. https://cepa.info/4358
Ataria Y.
(
2015
)
Where do we end and where does the world begin? The case of insight meditation.
Philosophical Psychology
28(8): 1128–1146.
Fulltext at https://cepa.info/4358
Copy Ref
This paper examines the experience of where we end and the rest of the world begins, that is, the sense of boundaries. Since meditators are recognized for their ability to introspect about the bodily level of experience, and in particular about their sense of boundaries, 27 senior meditators (those with more than 10, 000 hours of experience) were interviewed for this study. The main conclusions of this paper are that (a) the boundaries of the so-called “physical body” (body-as-object) are not equivalent to the individual’s sense of boundaries; (b) the sense of boundaries depends upon sensory activity; (c) the sense of boundaries should be defined according to its level of flexibility; (d) the sense of body ownership (the sense that it is one’s own body that undergoes an experience) cannot be reduced to the sense of boundaries; nevertheless, (e) the sense of ownership depends on the level of flexibility of the sense of boundaries.
Key words:
boundaries
,
mindfulness
,
sense of boundaries
,
sense of ownership.
Ataria Y., Dor-Ziderman Y. & Berkovich-Ohana A. (2015) How does it feel to lack a sense of boundaries? A case study of a long-term mindfulness meditator. Consciousness and Cognition 37: 133–147.
Ataria Y.
,
Dor-Ziderman Y.
&
Berkovich-Ohana A.
(
2015
)
How does it feel to lack a sense of boundaries? A case study of a long-term mindfulness meditator.
Consciousness and Cognition
37: 133–147.
Copy Ref
This paper discusses the phenomenological nature of the sense of boundaries (SB), based on the case of S, who has practiced mindfulness in the Satipathana and Theravada Vipassana traditions for about 40years and accumulated around 20,000h of meditative practice. S’s unique abilities enable him to describe his inner lived experience with great precision and clarity. S was asked to shift between three different stages: (a) the default state, (b) the dissolving of the SB, and (c) the disappearance of the SB. Based on his descriptions, we identified seven categories (with some overlap) that alter during the shifts between these stages, including the senses of: (1) internal versus external, (2) time, (3) location, (4) self, (5) agency (control), (6) ownership, and (7) center (first-person-egocentric-bodily perspective). Two other categories, the touching/touched structure and one’s bodily feelings, do not fade away completely even when the sense-of-boundaries disappears.
Baecker D. (2015) Mysteries of Cognition. Review of Neocybernetics and Narrative by Bruce Clarke. Constructivist Foundations 10(2): 261–263. https://cepa.info/1243
Baecker D.
(
2015
)
Mysteries of Cognition. Review of Neocybernetics and Narrative by Bruce Clarke.
Constructivist Foundations
10(2): 261–263.
Fulltext at https://cepa.info/1243
Copy Ref
Upshot:
Are narratives systems on their own, or rather structures supporting and, if need be, subverting the reproduction of systems? Bruce Clarke inquires into the ability of social systems theory to help understand narratives - and comes across some “mysteries of cognition” concerning the questions of how systems emerge and which of them might be considered self-referential and autopoietic.
Baecker D. (2015) The Be-ing of Objects. Cybernetics & Human Knowing 22(2–3): 49–58. https://cepa.info/3486
Baecker D.
(
2015
)
The Be-ing of Objects.
Cybernetics & Human Knowing
22(2–3): 49–58.
Fulltext at https://cepa.info/3486
Copy Ref
The paper is a reading of Martin Heidegger’s Contributions to Philosophy (Of the Even) by means of Ranulph Glanville’s notions of black box, cybernetic control and objects as well as by George Spencer-Brown’s notion of form and Fritz Heider’s notion of medium. In fact, as Heidegger was among those who emphasized systems thinking as the epitome of modern thinking, did in his lecture on Schelling’s Treatise on the Essence of Human Freedom a most thorough reading of this thinking, and considered cybernetics the very fulfilment of modern science it is interesting to know whether second-order cybernetics, as it was not known to Heidegger and as it delves into an understanding of inevitable complexity and foundational ignorance, falls within that verdict mere modernity or goes beyond it. If modern science in its rational understanding considers its subjects to be objects sitting still while being observed, then indeed second-order cybernetics is different. It looks into the observer’s interactions with black boxes, radically uncertain of where to expect operations of a self, but certain that we cannot restrict it to human consciousness.
Barrett L. F. & Simmons W. K. (2015) Interoceptive predictions in the brain. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 16(7): 419–429. https://cepa.info/5543
Barrett L. F.
&
Simmons W. K.
(
2015
)
Interoceptive predictions in the brain.
Nature Reviews Neuroscience
16(7): 419–429.
Fulltext at https://cepa.info/5543
Copy Ref
Intuition suggests that perception follows sensation and therefore bodily feelings originate in the body. However, recent evidence goes against this logic: interoceptive experience may largely reflect limbic predictions about the expected state of the body that are constrained by ascending visceral sensations. In this Opinion article, we introduce the Embodied Predictive Interoception Coding model, which integrates an anatomical model of corticocortical connections with Bayesian active inference principles, to propose that agranular visceromotor cortices contribute to interoception by issuing interoceptive predictions. We then discuss how disruptions in interoceptive predictions could function as a common vulnerability for mental and physical illness.
Barrett N. F. (2015) Enactive theory and the problem of non-sense. Adaptive Behavior 23(4): 234–240. https://cepa.info/2472
Barrett N. F.
(
2015
)
Enactive theory and the problem of non-sense.
Adaptive Behavior
23(4): 234–240.
Fulltext at https://cepa.info/2472
Copy Ref
Review of: Massimiliano Cappuccio and Tom Froese (eds.) Enactive cognition at the edge of sense-making: Making sense of non-sense. PalgraveMacmillan: Basingstoke, UK, 2014
Barrett N. F. (2015) The normative turn in enactive theory: An examination of its roots and implications. Topoi : Online first. https://cepa.info/2473
Barrett N. F.
(
2015
)
The normative turn in enactive theory: An examination of its roots and implications.
Topoi
: Online first.
Fulltext at https://cepa.info/2473
Copy Ref
This paper traces the development of enactive concepts of value and normativity from their roots in the canonical work of Varela et al. (Embodied mind: cognitive science and human experience. MIT Press, Cambridge, 1991) through more recent works of Ezequiel Di Paolo and others. It aims to show the central importance of these concepts for enactive theory while exposing a potentially troublesome ambiguity in their definition. Most definitions of enactive normativity are purely proscriptive, but it seems that enactive theories of cognitive agency and experience demand something more. On the other hand, it is not clear that anything other than proscriptive normativity can be made compatible with the enactive tenet of autonomy and the rejection of representations.
Key words:
Enactive theory
,
Value
,
Normativity
,
Adaptivity
,
Cognition
Barretto F. & Venturelli S. (2015) Zer0: An emergent and autopoietic multi-agent system for novelty creation in game art through gesture interaction. Procedia Manufacturing 3: 850–857.
Barretto F.
&
Venturelli S.
(
2015
)
Zer0: An emergent and autopoietic multi-agent system for novelty creation in game art through gesture interaction.
Procedia Manufacturing
3: 850–857.
Copy Ref
This paper describes a transdisciplinary theoretical-practical research, which address on the discussion about the possible applications of Multi-agent Systems, underlying the Maturana and Varela’s autopoietic concept considering the achievement of emergent results as heuristics to creativity. Autopoiesis (from the Greek “auto” which means “itself” and “poiesis” which means “creation”) describes the autonomous systems, able to self-reproduce and self-regulate, while iterating with the environment. In order to explore those concepts, we present Zer0, a game that invites the player to drift in a universe ruled by geometric shapes. Through interactions with other shapes, the player is able to evolve from a single line shape to more complex ones. Zer0 is a multi-agent system able to compose emergent music in real time. As interactions occur, chain reactions create the game soundtrack. There are two main agents involved: the player and the other shapes. While the player enjoys the ride, the other shapes are trying to interact with each other in order to expand their lifespan. The communication between agents is made through generated pulses, which are emitted by them and also serves as sonar, in order to perceive the environment.
Key words:
Multi-agent systems
,
creativity
,
emergence
,
autopoiesis
,
artificial intelligence
,
interaction
Barrouillet P. (2015) Theories of cognitive development: From Piaget to today. Developmental Review 38: 1–12. https://cepa.info/5882
Barrouillet P.
(
2015
)
Theories of cognitive development: From Piaget to today.
Developmental Review
38: 1–12.
Fulltext at https://cepa.info/5882
Copy Ref
At the occasion of their fortieth anniversary, the Archives Jean Piaget, a foundation created by Bärbel Inhelder in 1974 for the preservation and promulgation of Piaget’s oeuvre, invited in Geneva ten among the most prominent and influential developmental psychologists to the first Jean Piaget Conferences. Cognitive developmental psychology has undergone radical changes during these last four decades since the last formulations of Piaget’s constructivism. In this double special issue, the invitees of the Jean Piaget Conferences elaborate on their own conception of developmental changes in a variety of domains and functions, offering a comprehensive overview of current theories of cognitive development.
Key words:
theories of cognitive development
,
piaget
,
archives jean piaget.
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