ABSTRACT We argue that brains generate predictions only within the constraints of the action repertoire. This makes the computational complexity tractable and fosters a step-by-step parallel development of sensory and motor systems. Hence, it is more of a benefit than a literal constraint and may serve as a universal normative principle to understand sensorimotor coupling and interactions with the world.
%0 Journal Article
%1 BBS:8918854
%A König, Peter
%A Wilming, Niklas
%A Kaspar, Kai
%A Nagel, Saskia K.
%A Onat, Selim
%D 2013
%J Behavioral and Brain Sciences
%K cognition cognitive neuroscience predictivecoding
%N 03
%P 219--220
%R 10.1017/S0140525X12002294
%T Predictions in the light of your own action repertoire as a general computational principle
%U http://journals.cambridge.org/article_S0140525X12002294
%V 36
%X ABSTRACT We argue that brains generate predictions only within the constraints of the action repertoire. This makes the computational complexity tractable and fosters a step-by-step parallel development of sensory and motor systems. Hence, it is more of a benefit than a literal constraint and may serve as a universal normative principle to understand sensorimotor coupling and interactions with the world.
@article{BBS:8918854,
abstract = { ABSTRACT We argue that brains generate predictions only within the constraints of the action repertoire. This makes the computational complexity tractable and fosters a step-by-step parallel development of sensory and motor systems. Hence, it is more of a benefit than a literal constraint and may serve as a universal normative principle to understand sensorimotor coupling and interactions with the world. },
added-at = {2013-06-14T13:03:44.000+0200},
author = {König, Peter and Wilming, Niklas and Kaspar, Kai and Nagel, Saskia K. and Onat, Selim},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2da08505d92878548ad4d8cd68dd554e3/yish},
doi = {10.1017/S0140525X12002294},
interhash = {bdd02efb7b1ab006ab60fbaa18eaac58},
intrahash = {da08505d92878548ad4d8cd68dd554e3},
issn = {1469-1825},
journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences},
keywords = {cognition cognitive neuroscience predictivecoding},
month = {5},
number = 03,
numpages = {2},
pages = {219--220},
timestamp = {2013-06-14T13:05:30.000+0200},
title = {Predictions in the light of your own action repertoire as a general computational principle},
url = {http://journals.cambridge.org/article_S0140525X12002294},
volume = 36,
year = 2013
}