biology of cognition dr. tom froese. new cognitive science (4e)

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BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese

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Page 1: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

BIOLOGY OF COGNITIONDr. Tom Froese

Page 2: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

New cognitive science (4E)

Page 3: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Oustanding issues• Many advances, but core questions of cognitive are still

left unanswered.

• How to define a body?• How to define agency?• How to define an action?• How to define cognition?• Etc…

• Enactivism tries to provide the answers.

Page 4: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Biology of cognition• Systems biology by Maturana and Varela• Key textbooks:

• Autopoiesis and Cognition: The Realization of the Living (1980)• The Tree of Knowledge: The Biological Roots of Human

Understanding (1987)

• Non-representationalist theory of mind• Operational definitions of key concepts:

• Structural coupling• Operational closure• Autopoiesis• Cognition• Languaging

Page 5: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Autopoesis as ultrastability

“an autopoietic machine is an homeostatic (or rather a relationsstatic) system which has its own organization (defining network of relations) as the fundamental variables which it maintains constant”

(Maturana and Varela 1980, p. 79)

Page 6: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Autopoiesis = cellular self-production

The autopoietic organization is defined as a unit by a network of production of components (chemical reactions) which i. participate recursively in the same network of production of components

(chemical reactions) that produced them, and ii. carry out the network of production as a unit in the space in which the

components exist.Rudrauf et al. (2003)

Page 7: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)
Page 8: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Autopoiesis?

Page 9: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

First computer model of autopoiesis

Varela, Maturana and Uribe (1974)

Page 10: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Break and repair

Varela, Maturana and Uribe (1974)

Page 11: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Tesselation automaton

• The enlarged inset shows the processes occurring in a thin volume just under the membrane (catalytic production of B, and B components entering the membrane to become components).

• The reaction C → D represents the disintegration of a C component, leaving a hole in the membrane.

• B components are normally confined by the membrane, but can be lost through holes.

Bourgine and Stewart (2004)

Page 12: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Autopoiesis+

Ikegami and Suzuki (2008)

Page 13: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Model operation

Ikegami and Suzuki (2008)

Page 14: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Shapes and movement

Ikegami and Suzuki (2008)

Page 15: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Autopoietic chemotaxis

Ikegami and Suzuki (2008)

Page 16: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Minimal model of autopoiesis

Froese, Virgo and Ikegami (2014)

Page 17: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Minimal model of life?

The individuated reaction-diffusion systems in the model exhibit:- spontaneous self-movement: motility?- chemical gradient following/avoidance: sense-making?- mutual interaction via chemical traces: social interaction?

Froese, Virgo and Ikegami (2014)

Page 18: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

More circularities of the animal

Three levels of circular causality are distinguished in the figure: (i) the level of the central nervous system as a closed dynamical system;(ii) the level of the sensory-motor mutual definition of the state of the brain and of

the body; (iii) and the level of the ongoing coupling between the autonomous system and its

surroundings, including potential inter-individual interactions.(Rudrauf et al. 2003)

Page 19: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Computationalism

Di Paolo (2015)

Page 20: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Is there an autonomous system?

Di Paolo (2015)

Page 21: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Operational closure

Di Paolo (2015)

Page 22: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Biology of Cognition

Di Paolo (2015)

Page 23: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Enactivism

Di Paolo (2015)

Page 24: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

New foundations of cognitive science• The system creates its own body and its own boundary.• It defines what it is as an individual within a niche without

depending on the observer’s distinction.• It defines its own intrinsic goals and has a meaningful

perspective on the world. • (Thompson 2007).

• It is concerned because its existence is precarious.• Weber and Varela (2002); Jonas (1992)

• It realizes an action when it regulates its coupling with the environment in relation to the satisfaction of its goals.• Barandiaran et al. (2009)

Page 25: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

What is cognition?• “Due to the relative independence of the nervous system

from metabolic-constructive processes, i.e., the hierarchical decoupling of its electro-chemical activity, the normative regulation of sensorimotor interaction is underdetermined by basic material and energetic needs.

• The essential upshot of this relative independence is that the stability of an autonomous cognitive structure largely depends on the electro-chemical activity of the nervous system as well as the way that this structure is coupled to sensorimotor cycles.

• Only an agent that is capable of regulating its sensorimotor cycles in this non-metabolic manner can be characterized by a form of cognitive agency.”• Froese and Di Paolo (2011, p. 18)

Page 26: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

What is cognition?• “We can define cognitive interaction as follows:

• Cognition is the regulated sensorimotor coupling between a cognitive agent and its environment, • where the regulation is aimed at aspects of the coupling itself • so that it constitutes an emergent autonomous organization in the

domains of internal and relational dynamics, • without destroying in the process the agency of that agent (though

the latter’s scope can be augmented or reduced).”

• Froese and Di Paolo (2011, p. 18)

Page 27: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

The “cognitive gap”

Pfeifer and Bongard (2007)

Froese and Di Paolo (2009)

Page 28: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

The question of the “other”

Varela’s (2000) vision of the future of the cognitive sciences

Page 29: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Froese and Di Paolo (2011). The Enactive Approach: Theoretical Sketches From Cell to Society. P&C

Page 30: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

How to scale from life to mind?

No culture without social interaction.No mind without social interaction!No life without social interaction?

The life-mind continuity thesis has to overcome the “cognitive gap” – e.g. how to explain the transition from bacterial chemotaxis to human cognition?

- Adopt a developmental perspective- Drop the individualist perspective

Froese and Di Paolo (2009). Sociality and the life-mind continuity thesis. PCS

Sociality all the way down the life-mind continuity?

Page 31: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Enactivism

Di Paolo (2015)

Page 32: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Multi-agent systems

Multi-agent system: Mutual modulation of sensorimotor interaction resulting in autonomous interaction process.

Froese and Di Paolo (2011)

Page 33: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

References• Barandiaran, X., Di Paolo, E. A., & Rohde, M. (2009). Defining agency:

Individuality, normativity, asymmetry, and spatio-temporality in action. Adaptive Behavior, 17(5), 367-386

• Bourgine, P., & Stewart, J. (2004). Autopoiesis and cognition. Artificial Life, 10(3), 327-345

• Di Paolo, E. A. (2015). El enactivismo y la naturalización de la mente. In D. Pérez Chico & M. G. Bedia (Eds.), Nueva Ciencia Cognitiva: Hacia una Teoría Integral de la Mente (in press). Zaragoza: PUZ

• Froese, T., & Di Paolo, E. A. (2009). Sociality and the life-mind continuity thesis. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, 8(4), 439-463

• Froese, T., & Di Paolo, E. A. (2011). The enactive approach: Theoretical sketches from cell to society. Pragmatics & Cognition, 19(1), 1-36

• Froese, T., Virgo, N., & Ikegami, T. (2014). Motility at the origin of life: Its characterization and a model. Artificial Life, 20(1), 55-76

Page 34: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

References• Ikegami, T., & Suzuki, K. (2008). From homeostatic to

homeodynamic self. BioSystems, 91(2), 388-400• Jonas, H. (1992). The burden and blessing of mortality. The

Hastings Center Report, 22(1), 34-40• Maturana, H. R., & Varela, F. J. (1980). Autopoiesis and

Cognition: The Realization of the Living. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic

• Maturana, H. R., & Varela, F. J. (1987). The Tree of Knowledge: The Biological Roots of Human Understanding. Boston: Shambhala

• Pfeifer, R., & Bongard, J. C. (2007). How the Body Shapes the Way We Think: A New View of Intelligence. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press

Page 35: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

References• Rudrauf, D., Lutz, A., Cosmelli, D., Lachaux, J.-P., & Le Van Quyen, M.

(2003). From autopoiesis to neurophenomenology: Francisco Varela's exploration of the biophysics of being. Biological Research, 36(1), 27-65

• Thompson, E. (2007). Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press

• Varela, F. J. (2000). Steps to a Science of Inter-Being: Unfolding the Dharma Implicit in Modern Cognitive Science. In G. Watson, S. Batchelor & G. Claxton (Eds.), The Psychology of Awakening: Buddhism, Science, and our Day-to-Day Lives (pp. 71-89). Boston, MA: Weiser Books

• Varela, F. J., Maturana, H. R., & Uribe, R. (1974). Autopoiesis: The organization of living systems, its characterization and a model. BioSystems, 5, 187-196

• Weber, A., & Varela, F. J. (2002). Life after Kant: Natural purposes and the autopoietic foundations of biological individuality. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, 1, 97-125

Page 36: BIOLOGY OF COGNITION Dr. Tom Froese. New cognitive science (4E)

Homework

Please read:

• Harvey, I., Di Paolo, E. A., Wood, R., Quinn, M., & Tuci, E. A. (2005). Evolutionary robotics: A new scientific tool for studying cognition. Artificial Life, 11(1-2), 79-98