Periodic Reporting for period 2 - XSCAPE (Material Minds: Exploring the Interactions between Predictive Brains, Cultural Artifacts, and Embodied Visual Search)
Período documentado: 2023-05-01 hasta 2024-10-31
With the over 40 world-wide case studies to be conducted, this project will constitute the largest ecological experiment on embodied visual perception ever attempted. It will also use the emerging paradigm known as ‘active inference’ (or ‘predictive processing’) which offers a principled means of linking perception, attention, and actions with cognitive change and learning.
Using this unique combination of archaeological materials, visual neuroscience, and simulation- based studies, we aim to deliver the first fully-integrated framework for understanding the potent, yet ill-understood, cycles by which we, humans, make and transform the structured worlds that make and transform our minds.
The project focuses on the potential for action of reification in world history. This is of great relevance, especially in today's world, where communication takes place less and less via writing and where perception plays a key role in digital technologies. Our results could potentially have profound implications for society, touching upon various aspects of human life and prompting us to rethink fundamental assumptions about cognition, technology, ethics, and social organization. First, our results would likely drive innovation in technology, leading to the development of more intuitive and adaptive tools and interfaces. Second, in doing so, they will question issues about ownership, privacy, and access to external cognitive resources. Third, our experiments could inform new approaches to rehabilitation and therapy for individuals with cognitive impairments. Forth, they could also lead to significant changes in educational practices; leading to more personalized and effective learning strategies tailored to small groups or individual needs.
Our results will have the potential to not only illuminate how we understand our interaction with everyday objects and technology, our relationship with the natural and artificial world overtime, but also the way we relate to each other as a society. Not only leading to shifts in how we perceive and interact with others but also showing how collaboration and collective problem-solving approaches could leverage the distributed intelligence of groups.