2018
DOI: 10.1080/17470919.2018.1471003
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The brain, self and society: a social-neuroscience model of predictive processing

Abstract: This paper presents a hypothesis about how social interactions shape and influence predictive processing in the brain. The paper integrates concepts from neuroscience and sociology where a gulf presently exists between the ways that each describe the same phenomenon - how the social world is engaged with by thinking humans. We combine the concepts of predictive processing models (also called predictive coding models in the neuroscience literature) with ideal types, typifications and social practice - concepts … Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…To get the same original outputs despite what Leximancer calls a stochastic process of generating maps (https://info.leximancer.com/tutorial-guides), we learnt that a query needs to run “from scratch.” There seems to be a need for better integration of skills from social science and computer science to understand such “black boxes” of machine learning and algorithms for data and evidence synthesis . There are some intriguing parallels between the way that the software learns from the data and the way that both phenomenology and neuroscience describe the plasticity of human perception—the way that humans learn from the data and information they are exposed to . Alfred Schutz distinguished between ideal types as higher order organizing concepts and lower level more plastic typifications that are used to make sense of everyday life .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…To get the same original outputs despite what Leximancer calls a stochastic process of generating maps (https://info.leximancer.com/tutorial-guides), we learnt that a query needs to run “from scratch.” There seems to be a need for better integration of skills from social science and computer science to understand such “black boxes” of machine learning and algorithms for data and evidence synthesis . There are some intriguing parallels between the way that the software learns from the data and the way that both phenomenology and neuroscience describe the plasticity of human perception—the way that humans learn from the data and information they are exposed to . Alfred Schutz distinguished between ideal types as higher order organizing concepts and lower level more plastic typifications that are used to make sense of everyday life .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…13 There are some intriguing parallels between the way that the software learns from the data and the way that both phenomenology and neuroscience describe the plasticity of human perception-the way that humans learn from the data and information they are exposed to. 46 Alfred Schutz distinguished between ideal types as higher order organizing concepts and lower level more plastic typifications that are used to make sense of everyday life. 47,48 Typifications change and evolve as new information becomes available.…”
Section: Future Research and Epistemological Inquirymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Social interactions add an additional domain to how we how we interpret or infer our own behaviour, an extra domain for which the brain must account for in its model of the world. The putative computational substrates of how these shared domains are formed or inferred and modulated in the choice blindness paradigm is an area we wish to explore in the future (Bolis & Schilbach, 2020;Kelly, Kriznik, Kinmonth, & Fletcher, 2019;Ramstead, Veissière, & Kirmayer, 2016).…”
Section: Choice-induced Preference Change In Groupsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is their sense of who and what they are, being a unique individual separate from others, and what their place in the world is. 27 However, this sense of self and the sense of self-determination that goes with it are at least partly illusory. This is because some behavior is automatic 28 and because individuals are enmeshed in relationships with others.…”
Section: Evidence Of Behavior Change Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%