Cortical mechanisms of action selection: the affordance competition hypothesis
Google (United States) · Université de Montréal
Abstract
At every moment, the natural world presents animals with two fundamental pragmatic problems: selection between actions that are currently possible and specification of the parameters or metrics of those actions. It is commonly suggested that the brain addresses these by first constructing representations of the world on which to build knowledge and make a decision, and then by computing and executing an action plan. However, neurophysiological data argue against this serial viewpoint. In contrast, it is proposed here that the brain processes sensory information to specify, in parallel, several potential actions that are currently available. These potential actions compete against each other for further…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 9.46
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 201
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Action selection
- Computer science
- Variety (cybernetics)
- Neurophysiology
- Neuroscience
- Affordance
- Action (physics)
- Process (computing)