Multiscale Enaction Model (MEM) he case of complexity and ``context-sensitivity'' in vision
Affiliation auteurs | !!!! Error affiliation !!!! |
Titre | Multiscale Enaction Model (MEM) he case of complexity and ``context-sensitivity'' in vision |
Type de publication | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2014 |
Auteurs | Laurent E |
Journal | FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY |
Volume | 5 |
Pagination | 1425 |
Date Published | DEC 19 |
Type of Article | Article |
ISSN | 1664-1078 |
Mots-clés | autopoiesis, distributed cognition, dynamical systems, embodied cognition, embodiment, enactivism, motivated perception, situated cognition |
Résumé | I review the data on human visual perception that reveal the critical role played by nonvisual contextual factors influencing visual activity. The global perspective that progressively emerges reveals that vision is sensitive to multiple couplings with other systems whose nature and levels of abstraction in science are highly variable. Contrary to some views where vision is immersed in modular hard-wired modules, rather independent from higherlevel or other non-cognitive processes, converging data gathered in this article suggest that visual perception can be theorized in the larger context of biological, physical, and social systems with which it is coupled, and through which it is enacted. Therefore, any attempt to model complexity and multiscale couplings, or to develop a complex synthesis in the fields of mind, brain, and behavior, shall involve a systematic empirical study of both connectedness between systems or subsystems, and the embodied, multiscale and flexible teleology of subsystems. The conceptual model (Multiscale Enaction Model [MEM]) that is introduced in this paper finally relates empirical evidence gathered from psychology to biocomputational data concerning the human brain. Both psychological and biocomputational descriptions of MEM are proposed in order to help fill in the gap between scales of scientific analysis and to provide an account for both the autopoiesis-driven search for information, and emerging perception. |
DOI | 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01425 |