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This article comes back on the hypothesis developed by the evolutionary theory of the sensorimotor paradox that our capacity to produce mental representation could be derived from a dissociation of sensory prediction systems from motor action. As they should be then coordinated together, we are drawing further possible leads regarding the intermediary space between linear mental projections that are not bound and stopped by sensory feedback, and ongoing sensory perception whether large or discrete. Dissociated prediction would be eventually interrupted by sensory input, getting lost, reinitiated and derived onto another prediction. In that sense, we connect this inspection with studies on attentional capture and the interference caused by sensory perception of cyclical and discrete body events such as breathing, blinking and swallowing. A global state of balance and expectation to dissociative activity, called meta-prediction, could compensate on the other hand for the lack of sensory feedback. As a representational infrastructure, its model is to be detailled, as would be the role of a system's avoidance of memories of pain, defined here by the concept of traumatic affordance, or the stabilising role of gravity. If the stochastic approach of this hypothesis is yet mostly speculative, interrogating mental imagery and language's structure, this article suggests several ways of testing the theory based on upcoming EEG recordings.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biosystems.2025.105508 | DOI Listing |
Biosystems
August 2025
Department of Evolutionary Æsthetics, Paris 8 Saint-Denis University, Saint-Denis, France. Electronic address:
This article comes back on the hypothesis developed by the evolutionary theory of the sensorimotor paradox that our capacity to produce mental representation could be derived from a dissociation of sensory prediction systems from motor action. As they should be then coordinated together, we are drawing further possible leads regarding the intermediary space between linear mental projections that are not bound and stopped by sensory feedback, and ongoing sensory perception whether large or discrete. Dissociated prediction would be eventually interrupted by sensory input, getting lost, reinitiated and derived onto another prediction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Commun Inq
July 2022
Department of Communication, University of Johannesburg, Southern Africa.
This is a cross-national comparative study of how media in Zimbabwe, Botswana, and South Africa reconstructed their operations in response to Covid-19 global pandemic. The study is grounded in a qualitative research design that uses semi-structured interviews with journalists from Zimbabwe, Botswana and South Africa. The study investigated how news operations, newsroom cultures, news gathering, and news dissemination practices were impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
April 2021
Department of Communication Studies, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva 8410501, Israel.
(1) Background: Digital health research has indicated that people with stigmatized health problems are drawn to online support groups (OSGs) because these groups help them to manage such conditions. However, little is known about how media affordances-interactions between the technology and the user-reconfigure the ways in which stigmatized individuals use OSGs and interact with others like themselves. (2) Method: The current study applied an affordance framework to evaluate how Facebook and WhatsApp support groups can help military veterans and their partners cope with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and was based on interviews with 34 PTSD-OSG members in Israel.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Psychother
September 2021
National eTherapy Centre, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Purpose: The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in a widespread adoption of videoconferencing as a communication medium in mental health service delivery. This review considers the empirical literature to date on using videoconferencing to deliver psychological therapy to adults presenting with mental health problems.
Method: Papers were identified via search of relevant databases.
Behav Brain Res
February 2020
Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK.
This paper offers a formal account of emotional inference and stress-related behaviour, using the notion of active inference. We formulate responses to stressful scenarios in terms of Bayesian belief-updating and subsequent policy selection; namely, planning as (active) inference. Using a minimal model of how creatures or subjects account for their sensations (and subsequent action), we deconstruct the sequences of belief updating and behaviour that underwrite stress-related responses - and simulate the aberrant responses of the sort seen in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
View Article and Find Full Text PDF