1 / 63

la nature des sensations

la nature des sensations. sentir des choses différentes dans une modalité sensorielle dans différentes modalités sentir plutôt que rien sentir. Le problème de la conscience phénoménale. Sensations. Actions. Sensory inputs. Brain mechanisms. Sentir = exercer une habilité sensorimotrice .

MikeCarlo
Download Presentation

la nature des sensations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  2. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  3. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  4. la nature des sensations • sentir des choses différentes • dans une modalité sensorielle • dans différentes modalités • sentir plutôt que rien sentir Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  5. Le problème de la conscience phénoménale Sensations Actions Sensory inputs Brain mechanisms Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  6. Sentir = exercer une habilité sensorimotrice Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  7. Sentir = exercer une habilité sensorimotrice Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  8. vision classique nouvelle vision le cerveau génère les sensations le cerveau génère savoir et actions Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  9. la nature des sensations • sentir des choses différentes • dans une modalité sensorielle • dans différentes modalités • sentir plutôt que rien sentir Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  10. Sensorimotor Contingencies(D. M. MacKay, 1956) sensory input = f ( action ) Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  11. Feeling Softness knowing that sensorimotor contingencies typical of softness are currently being obeyed. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  12. Seeing Red knowing that sensorimotor contingencies typical of red are currently being obeyed. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  13. “Red” is the way red things change the light (Broackes, 1992) Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  14. Non-uniformity of color sampling Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  15. Dual Purkinje Eye Tracker(Françoise Vitu & Denis Lancelin) Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  16. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  17. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  18. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  19. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  20. Aline Bompas with split-field glasses Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  21. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  22. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  23. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  24. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  25. Previous efforts • Kohler 1951 + • Mc Collough 1965 - • Harrington 1965 - • Leppman & Wieland, 1966 + Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  26. Forced choice more yellow-ish more blue-ish Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  27. Judging white after removing glasses % responses “blue” color Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  28. la nature des sensations • sentir des choses différentes • dans une modalité sensorielle • dans différentes modalités • sentir plutôt que rien sentir Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  29. big change expanding flow shifting flow nothing big change no change increasing amplitude asynchrony big change nothing Intermodal differences SEEING HEARING blink: move forward: turn sideways: cover ears: cover eyes: Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  30. Tactile Visual Sensory Substitution Bach y Rita (1972; 1984) Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  31. testing P. Meijer’s “The vOICe” (M. Auvray) Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  32. Audio-Tactile SubstitutionAline Bompas, Kevin O’Regan right microphone left microphone isolating head phones Vibrator on right leg Vibrator on left leg Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  33. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  34. Botvinick & Cohen, 1998 Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  35. Seeing Straightness knowing that sensorimotor contingencies typical of straightness are currently being obeyed. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  36. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  37. Cortex Retina Visual field Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  38. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  39. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  40. Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  41. What is a sensorimotor law? S = f(M) INTRINSIC way of describing relation which is independent of the code (Differential geometry, Lie Groups) Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  42. Philipona, O ’Regan & Nadal, Neural Computation 2003 Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  43. Philipona, O ’Regan & Nadal, Neural Computation 2003 Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  44. la nature des sensations • sentir des choses différentes • dans une modalité sensorielle • dans différentes modalités • sentir plutôt que rien sentir Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  45. Why is sensory experience different from other mental phenomena? Corporality/Bodiliness • tight link to body motions Alerting capacity/Grabbiness • transients incontrovertibly grab attention Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  46. Corporality/Bodiliness if voluntary motions systematically affect input e.g. visual, auditory, etc. also: proprioception not: autonomic sensory pathways Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  47. Alerting Capacity/Grabbiness capacity to peremptorily interfere with cognitive processing (can cause exogenous attentional capture) e.g. visual, auditory pathways, etc. not: vestibular, proprioceptive, autonomic sensory pathways Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  48. Remembering Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  49. Seeing Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

  50. "raw feel" Master ENS 2004 - O’Regan

More Related