the inner world as a consequence of behavioural and perceptual simulation

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The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation Germund Hesslow Birmingham 2003 Faculty of Medicine Lund University

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Faculty of Medicine Lund University. The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation. Germund Hesslow Birmingham 200 3. Problems of the inner world. How does the inner world arise? What is the function of the inner world? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and

Perceptual Simulation

Germund Hesslow

Birmingham 2003

Faculty of MedicineLund University

Page 2: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Problems of the inner world

• How does the inner world arise?

• What is the function of the inner world?

• Can animals and robots have inner worlds?

Page 3: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

The Simulation Hypothesis

1) Behavioural simulation: early stages of an action can occur without causing overt movement.

2) Perceptual simulation: perceptual activity can be elicited within the brain without an external stimulus.

3) Anticipation: simulated perception can be elicited by (simulated) behaviour.

Page 4: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

David Hume (1711-76)

Page 5: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Alexander Bain (1818-1903)

Page 6: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Simulation of behaviour: covert, incipient behaviour

’The tendency of the idea of an action to produce the fact, shows that the idea is already the fact in a weaker form. Thinking is restrained speaking or acting.’ (Bain, 1868 p 340)

Analogues: Have the radio on but the volume turned down.Have the car engine running but with no clutch

Page 7: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Hierarchical organisation of action

Draw triangle

Get pen Get paper Draw

Draw horizontal line Draw sloping ….

Contract m brachioradialis Contract ....

Page 8: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Main signal flow

Page 9: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Evidence for covert behaviour

Imaging studies

Lesion studies

Electrophysiology

Behavioural experiments

Page 10: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Covert behaviour – primary motor cortex

Subjects were instructed to imagine forearm flexion¯ extension movements with their right arm.

TMS was applied to the motor cortex on one side, and the MEPs were recorded from the contralateral flexor muscle (biceps brachialis).

Flexion

Extension Extension

Flexion

Fadiga et al. Neuropsychologia, 37:147-158, 1999

Page 11: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Simulation of Perception:sensory reactivation

‘What is the manner of occupation of the brain with a resuscitated feeling of resistance, a smell or a sound? There is only one answer that seems admissible. The renewed feeling occupies the very same parts, and in the same manner, as the original feeling, and no other parts, nor in any other assignable manner. ‘(Bain, 1868, p. 338)

Page 12: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Pain Perception

Page 13: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Phantom pain

Page 14: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Seeing

Page 15: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Imaging

Page 16: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Evidence for perceptual simulation

Behavioural experiments

Imaging studies

Lesion studies

Electrophysiology

Page 17: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Mental rotation

Page 18: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Le Bihan et al. PNAS 90:11802-11805, 1993

MRI signal intensity in visual cortex during external vs imagined stimulus

Page 19: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

MRI activity with external and imagined stimulus

Tootell et al, TINS, 2: 174-183, 1998

Page 20: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

I am NOT suggesting

That the brain creates an image, a representation or a unified experience of the sensory input or that that image is then inspected to guide behaviour

Page 21: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

I AM suggesting

That a complex stimulus can elicit many different behaviours, such as describing the stimulus verbally, pointing towards it, avoiding it, drawing it…

The same is true about an internally generated stimulus.

Page 22: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Anticipation:action-sensation associations

’The succession designated as cause and effect, are fixed in the mind by Contiguity. The simplest activity is where our own activity is the cause. We strike a blow, and there comes a noise and a fracture. … Hardly any bond of association arrives sooner at maturity, than the bond between our own actions and the sensible effects that follow from them.’ (Bain, 1868, p. 427)

Page 23: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Predictable consequence

s1 r1

S2 s2 r2 R2

S1 R1

Page 24: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Anticipation

s1 r1

S2 s2 r2 R2

S1 R1

Page 25: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Tolman & Gleitman (1949) J Exp Psych 39: 810-819.

Anticipation – no maps

Page 26: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Simulation of behavioural chain

S Rs r1 11 1

S Rs r2 22 2

s r3 33 3S R

S Rs r1 11 1

S Rs r2 22 2

s r3 33 3S R

S Rs r1 11 1

S Rs r2 22 2

s r3 33 3S R

Behavioural chain

Page 27: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

A B CA B C

D ED E

F G HF G H

LF(G) LF(G) D DRF(G) ERF(G) E

Do we need cognitive maps?

Page 28: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

rCBF during Tower of London task

Baker et el., Neuropsychologia. 34:515-26, 1996

Page 29: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Conversation

Page 30: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Talking to oneself

Page 31: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Simulating conversation

Page 32: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Why do motor structures participate in cognitive functions ?

a) Thinking is covert movementb) Abstract actions need similar auxiliary systems

Page 33: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Working Memory as Covert Actions Extended in Time

Predictions:

Working memorya) involves prefrontal and posterior (sensory) cortex

b) utilises the same circuitry as long-term memory

c) is modality and feature specific

Page 34: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Strong points of the simulation hypothesis

• Ontological parsimony: no representations, images …

• No evolutionary leaps: same structures underlying inner world as are used for perception and movement

• Explains relationship between cognitive and motor functions

Page 35: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Problems of the inner world

• How does the inner world arise?

Yes, if their ”brains” can generate their own input

• Can animals and robots have inner worlds?

Inevitable consequence of simulation

• What is the function of the inner world?

By simulation of behaviour and perception

Page 36: The Inner World As a Consequence of Behavioural and Perceptual Simulation

Outline of the simulation hypothesis can be found in Hesslow G (2002) Conscious thought as simulation of behaviour and perception. Trends Cogn

Sci, 6:242-247

Many of the critical ideas can be found in the behaviourist literature, for instance Bain A (1855, 1868) The Senses and the IntellectSkinner BF (1974) About Behaviorism. Knopf, New York

For empirical evidence for covert behaviour, see papers by Jeannerod, e.g.Jeannerod M (1994) The representing brain: Neural correlates of motor intention and imagery.

Behav Brain Sci 17: 187-245

Evidence for simulation of perception is reviewed inKosslyn SM (1994) Image and Brain: The Resolution of the Imagery Debate. MIT Press,

Cambridge

Robot simulationZiemke T, Jirenhed D-A, Hesslow G (2002) Blind adaptive Behavior Based on Internal Simulation of Perception. Technical report HS-IDA-TR-02-001

More information on my website www.mphy.lu.se/avd/nf/hesslow

References