How the brain shapes reality - with Andy Clark

Ғылым және технология

Join philosopher and cognitive scientist Andy Clark as he challenges our conventional understanding of the mind's interaction with the world.
Watch the Q&A for this talk (exclusively for our channel members) here: • Q&A: How the brain sha...
Buy Andy's book here: geni.us/cxB87
This Discourse was recorded at the Ri on 26 January 2024.
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This innovative concept suggests that the brain operates as a dynamic prediction engine, continually shaping our perception of our bodies and the surrounding environment. Through a complex interplay of sensory data and expectations, the brain orchestrates every facet of human experience, from the everyday to the extraordinary.
In this thought-provoking Discourse, Andy will guide us through the inner workings of the predictive brain, exposing its profound implications for our well-being, mental health, and society. For instance, chronic pain and mental disorders often result from subtle disruptions in our unconscious predictions, offering promising avenues for more precise and effective treatments. As we scrutinise the boundaries between ourselves and the external world, we'll uncover the intricate connections between our environments, memories, thoughts, and emotions. This journey reveals perception as a carefully controlled form of 'controlled hallucination.'
Join us as we delve into the extraordinary explanatory power of the predictive brain. Discover how it revolutionizes our comprehension of perception and reality, all without resorting to hyperbolic language or clichés.
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Andy Clark is a Professor of Cognitive Philosophy at the University of Sussex. His interests include artificial intelligence, embodied and extended cognition, robotics, and computational neuroscience. From 2017-2021 he was PI on a European Research Council Advanced Grant: Expecting Ourselves: Embodied Prediction and the Construction of Conscious Experience. He is PI on an ERC Synergy Grant, XScape and Material Minds: Exploring the Interactions between Predictive Brains, Cultural Artifacts, and Embodied Visual Search.
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Пікірлер: 298

  • @jameseats4144
    @jameseats4144Ай бұрын

    My son is autistic and this talk has given me a new way to think about how he interprets the world and why he reacts the way he does.

  • @cjmitz

    @cjmitz

    Ай бұрын

    An amazing dad! All the best to you and your son

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Ай бұрын

    Target tracking is a syntropic process! Making predictions is a syntropic process -- teleological. Syntropy (prediction) is dual to increasing entropy -- the 4th law of thermodynamics! Teleological physics (syntropy) is dual to non teleological physics (entropy). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant.

  • @GrimrDirge

    @GrimrDirge

    Ай бұрын

    I should add that McGilChrist's perspective on autism as right-hemisphere deficit is also worth understanding, and comes from a completely different angle.

  • @signaldrift2274

    @signaldrift2274

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, a new way to think, and I believe we all share the commonality of being different. Chris Packham - The Walk That Made Me - may be of interest.

  • @KAT-dg6el

    @KAT-dg6el

    Ай бұрын

    @@GrimrDirge Defect? Or just a different way of thinking.

  • @TheRockybulwinkle
    @TheRockybulwinkleАй бұрын

    For years there was a futon in my brothers bedroom. My parents removed it at some point, and the first time I looked in there after that, I hallucinated for a split second that it was still there. I hypothesized it was due to the expectation at the time and it’s interesting to learn more about it here!

  • @helmutgensen4738

    @helmutgensen4738

    23 күн бұрын

    What were you smoking?

  • @nilesspindrift1934
    @nilesspindrift1934Ай бұрын

    Great talk and I shall be ordering the book. Also got to say how much I loved Professor Clark's suit!

  • @TheRoyalInstitution

    @TheRoyalInstitution

    Ай бұрын

    It’s a great talk and a great suit!

  • @onionknight2239

    @onionknight2239

    Ай бұрын

    Definitely

  • @GwydirTubeCast

    @GwydirTubeCast

    Ай бұрын

    White and gold I'd a great colour combination I agree 😉

  • @KAT-dg6el

    @KAT-dg6el

    Ай бұрын

    @@GwydirTubeCast😂 i’m seeing the opposite colors.

  • @d.lav.2198
    @d.lav.2198Ай бұрын

    As much a fan as I am of the Predictive Processing approach to mind/brain, as someone who suffers from a misdiagnosed chronic health problem, I know for a fact that the complexity of the body's capacity to malfunction can outstrip the much more coarse-grained diagnostic capacity of the medical profession. Some poorly understood chronic conditions really are somatically derived rather than model-driven.

  • @bluefernlove

    @bluefernlove

    Ай бұрын

    What are your symptoms?

  • @Iamthepossum

    @Iamthepossum

    Ай бұрын

    thank you for your brilliant & insightful comment ❤️

  • @d.lav.2198

    @d.lav.2198

    Ай бұрын

    @@bluefernlove Idiopathic dystonia. Nightmare.

  • @MunkiZee

    @MunkiZee

    18 күн бұрын

    I can relate, it's particularly galling when you're already well aware how powerful the mind can be

  • @thewayfarer1571
    @thewayfarer15718 күн бұрын

    What really interests me about all this is the realisation that the thought sequence we experience that gives us the sense of time,passing in a certain order, in reality is an illusion.

  • @briseboy

    @briseboy

    2 күн бұрын

    It ismost useful for a neural system to retain consecutive inference of time. All nonchronnological reflection is useful for establishing salience, valence, and sensorimotor response to previously experienced sm responses. Do never forget that an energy-eater such as brain/neuron must primarily be useful. This is the constraint to which evolution responds. Organisms with motile young, when becoming sessile adults, absorb their no longer useful brains. All tissue is subject to this, muscle, vascular, even mitochondria within cells whose activity reduces. Think efficiency when questioning any variation.

  • @jaytsecan
    @jaytsecanАй бұрын

    What a fantastic and highly informative and engrossing video. Thank you so much for sharing!

  • @arinco3817
    @arinco3817Ай бұрын

    I'm only 10 mins in but absolutely loving this talk!

  • @scotimages
    @scotimagesАй бұрын

    How superb it is to see a philosopher who is is empirically engaged. It gives me hope that there is a future for philosphical enterprise!

  • @sophistrionics

    @sophistrionics

    Ай бұрын

    Empiricism is a belief within epistemology... that is to say, it's part of a school of philosophy. Empiricism was created through philosophy. So for you to act like it's some novel feature for a philosopher to be empirically engaged is supremely ignorant. Locke, Berkeley, Hume - these were all philosophers, and they themselves laid the groundwork of empiricism. This is very much within the domain of philosophy, and always has been. Why, then, are you so impressed by this?

  • @scotimages

    @scotimages

    Ай бұрын

    Do you know anything beyond British Empricicsm ?

  • @subhuman3408

    @subhuman3408

    21 күн бұрын

    Philosophers who engage with empiricism is who we call scientist 😂

  • @scotimages

    @scotimages

    21 күн бұрын

    @@subhuman3408 have you ever been a scientist?

  • @jondor654

    @jondor654

    18 күн бұрын

    Positively a positive viewpoint.

  • @tonyevans9999
    @tonyevans9999Ай бұрын

    This has been very helpful for me, thank you. Fascinating

  • @TommyEfreeti
    @TommyEfreetiАй бұрын

    What you believe you expect to perceive your senses will "receive", to paraphrase Bohm. "Reality is what we take to be true. What we take to be true is what we believe. What we believe is based upon our perceptions. What we perceive depends on what we look for. What we look for depends on what we think. What we think depends on what we perceive. What we perceive determines what we believe. What we believe determines what we take to be true. What we take to be true is our reality." - Bohm

  • @liarspeaksthetruth
    @liarspeaksthetruthАй бұрын

    My wife is late-deafened -- she says the listening exercise @7:30 is EXACTLY what it's like to learn to hear with a cochlear implant. (she did fantastically well - she learned VERY quickly)

  • @polocrunch
    @polocrunchАй бұрын

    So classic for psychology to immediately go to "and therefore it's all in your head", "just change your way of thinking!" whenever any new development around chronic conditions comes out.

  • @Serastrasz

    @Serastrasz

    Ай бұрын

    They didn't say that the body damage isn't real, just that you can affect your perception of it. I have CFS, so I have first hand experience with this. Science has found physical and metabolic anomalies in the muscle tissues, so the disease is very much real and not "in your head". Similar anomalies were found in Long Covid patients. They have no clue about the how and why (yet), so there's nothing they can do to fix or alleviate the damage directly. However, having a positive or negative mental attitude and expectations towards the disease can make a lot of difference in how debilitating it is in daily life.

  • @abbeleon

    @abbeleon

    Ай бұрын

    I hear you as someone who has gotten the "in your head" response from a doctor before but maybe it's more like "it's a lot more in our heads than we thought before but that doesn't mean it's at all easy to shift those processes". If anything, with the framework of the talk, processing difficulties have a stronger validation for their reality. They have to be taken just as seriously as a nail piercing a body because the brain makes sure that the pain is just as real. So instead of dismissal, psychiatrists have a duty to tackle so called "in our heads" problems with creativity and scientific soundness.

  • @d_wigglesworth
    @d_wigglesworthАй бұрын

    In addition to the convex-/concave- mask "illusion/prediction" and the effectiveness of even the "honest placebo", there is also the vertigo that is induced when some people (yours truly, for instance) step onto a motionless escalator: even though i know "it's all in my head", and I'm prepared to experience a moment of vertigo yet again (every time), I still experience it... Presumably, if I had never seen an escalator in my life, I would experience no vertigo.

  • @OzGoober
    @OzGooberАй бұрын

    Thank you! That is awesome.

  • @arinco3817
    @arinco3817Ай бұрын

    This is my favourite talk from this channel. I've been obsessed with AI for the last year but I feel like I'm gonna go down a neuroscience rabbit hole now lol

  • @terrizittritsch745
    @terrizittritsch7453 күн бұрын

    Interesting lecture by knowledgable person. Gives one a lot to think about on numerous topics and experiences.

  • @reynalindstrom2496
    @reynalindstrom249626 күн бұрын

    Professor Klark looks great in the suit! Love from Sweden 💛💙

  • @admiral_franz_von_hipper5436
    @admiral_franz_von_hipper5436Ай бұрын

    With the sine wave speech examples, I understood the exames pretty well on the initial playthrough. I suspect that a major reason behind it is that I have been using communications radios for a while and the voices that come through those can get pretty close to the stripped sine wave voices.

  • @TheEduInitiative

    @TheEduInitiative

    Ай бұрын

    I also understood the stripped sine audio tapes well. Although it sounded like Gollum from Lord of the Rings lol. It also made the person speaking seem older in my opinion, which is interesting…

  • @KribensaUK
    @KribensaUKАй бұрын

    Based on what you said, the case of the construction worker sounds like the brain also weighing up the consequences of a pain response or lack thereof. The nail could have damaged the foot in a way that also disrupted the usual pain signals, so not feeling pain and so walking on it could cause more damage. So it erred on the side of a pain response until further evidence was obtained

  • @janlang8605
    @janlang8605Ай бұрын

    Splendid lecture!

  • @BHPhreakyx
    @BHPhreakyxАй бұрын

    what a treat. wonderful talk and talker

  • @fat_bastard215
    @fat_bastard215Ай бұрын

    I wasn't prepared for how impactful the sine wave speech demonstration would be. I'm floored

  • @razielgw
    @razielgw7 күн бұрын

    Phenomenal lecture... I'm speechless...

  • @neoepicurean3772
    @neoepicurean3772Ай бұрын

    My brother-in-law has been crippled by lower body pain for a few years now. He was an exercise addict and assumed he had injured his back so tried to get treatment, but the doctors -after extensive investigation- couldn't find any problem. He, naturally, insisted there was a problem and kept looking for answers. The doctors then went further and told him the pain was all in his head (not to say he was not actually in pain). Long story short, he rejected this idea and had a mental breakdown and was institutionalised by the family when he expressed suicidal intentions. He's since accepted he has a 'mental' illness but he is pretty much bed ridden, unless my wife wants to take him indoor climbing, where he suddenly can move almost normally, albeit slowly. The account presented in this lecture makes a lot of sense in his case. PRT sounds like a good option for him. Thanks Dr Clark!

  • @segamai
    @segamaiАй бұрын

    I immediately heard the sine wave speech correctly, and in my head I visualised a sentence with bits chopped off it as the sine undulated from audible to inaudible. Take that, science! You don’t control me!!

  • @guillermoa.nerygomez8782

    @guillermoa.nerygomez8782

    Ай бұрын

    Well I actually used science to be able to understand it: I pre-visualized someone speaking to me in English with an English accent, and got most of the words of each sentence right. (I stimulated a prediction).

  • @theprimalpitch190
    @theprimalpitch19011 күн бұрын

    Excellent. Also, it's a bit of NLP getting stumbled upon yet again (45 years after the fact) showing that we can recreate the world by training our predictions driven by new imagery, new thought sequences, new internal messaging, etc.

  • @not_crazy_at_all
    @not_crazy_at_allАй бұрын

    Well, after a couple of minutes I think I got a new topic to learn more about. Thank you for this presentation.

  • @NishanthSalahudeen
    @NishanthSalahudeenАй бұрын

    42:59 pain in phantom limbs could be brought about in this way, and that would explain why the mirrorbox therapy as described by V Ramachandran helps to cure it. Am guessing that phobias work the same way too.

  • @wrekced
    @wrekcedАй бұрын

    I have Schizo-affective disorder so I experience visual and auditory hallucinations. This has given me some interesting insignt into what I experience. Thanks for this info! Also precision weighting looks to me like it plays a part in the placebo effect. This is really interesting!

  • @kennethgarcia25

    @kennethgarcia25

    Ай бұрын

    actually a functional neurological disorder (pseudo-psychosis) with a cluster b personality is more accurate. the attitude suggests narcissism, but the attention seeking using psychopathology claims is more histrionic... If you understand the placebo effect, you need to now question your motives for needing to assume a dramatic sick role for attention.

  • @michaelblankenau6598

    @michaelblankenau6598

    Ай бұрын

    @@kennethgarcia25It might be time for you to pull your head out of your a$$ .

  • @bryandraughn9830

    @bryandraughn9830

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@kennethgarcia25 Why do you type things?

  • @orbismworldbuilding8428

    @orbismworldbuilding8428

    Ай бұрын

    ​@kennethgarcia25 schizoaffective disorder means their schizophrenia effects them in episodes paired with a mood disorder. It is neurogenetic and can be treated with medication, unlike personality disorders (which medication only reduces anger depression or anxiety.)

  • @orbismworldbuilding8428

    @orbismworldbuilding8428

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@kennethgarcia25 also nothing they said indicates personality disorder, and personality disorders aren't usally easy to notice from a single isolated instance, and the rare instances where it can be, are easily confused with any number of other disorders in different situations.

  • @bryandraughn9830
    @bryandraughn9830Ай бұрын

    The idea that my brain builds a model of myself within a model of the world blows my mind!

  • @jpopelish

    @jpopelish

    Ай бұрын

    The coolest thing about your mind's model of itself is that the model has a model of itself, which has a model of itself, which has . . . It is like standing between two parallel mirrors.

  • @sjoerd1239

    @sjoerd1239

    Ай бұрын

    @@jpopelish Why do you think it is like that?

  • @jpopelish

    @jpopelish

    Ай бұрын

    @@sjoerd1239 To be a usably accurate model of one's own mind, it has to be a model of a mind that includes a model of itself. I think this kind of self model is what results in self awareness. We not only predict our external reality, but predict our thoughts and responses to that external reality. I think this development was preceded by modeling the minds of those around us, to predict their behavior. But then we applied that predictive power to ourselves.

  • @Lemoncare

    @Lemoncare

    13 күн бұрын

    @@sjoerd1239mirror neurons ?

  • @oliverjamito9902
    @oliverjamito990218 күн бұрын

    Keep watch!

  • @oliverjamito9902
    @oliverjamito990218 күн бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @JohnClulow
    @JohnClulowАй бұрын

    Wow! Thank you for this explanation of an area of technology that has so many ramifications for issues ranging from the sociopolitical to the personal management of pain etc. Work like this holds out hope that our species may be capable of successfully taking the next steps in the evolutionary process!

  • @jaytsecan

    @jaytsecan

    Ай бұрын

    Well said!

  • @jpopelish
    @jpopelishАй бұрын

    Those trying to program self driving vehicles really need to be thinking of programming in these terms, and about how to make the program humble about the likelihood of sometimes predicting incorrectly, and jumping to a better, alternate hypothetical reality, gracefully.

  • @componentsinmotion4683

    @componentsinmotion4683

    Ай бұрын

    I honestly couldn't guess which would be harder: developing the complex conceptual imagination of philosophers within the minds of engineers, or developing the functional knowledge and rigorous constraints of design in the minds of philosophers. But we do desperately need some engineer-philosophers. We've got Elon Musk poking holes in the ground, the sky, and the human brain, with plenty of imagination for what's possible, but without much sign of humility, restraint, or virtue. What we could really use on the cusp of a new age is a Benjamin Franklin.

  • @timwoods3173
    @timwoods3173Ай бұрын

    Thank you

  • @madgepickles
    @madgepicklesАй бұрын

    This was excellent, thanks

  • @juanromero7189
    @juanromero7189Ай бұрын

    He doesn't mention it, but I can see potential on psychological trauma, addiction (compulsive behavior in general), among other things. All these seen them as flaws in the prediction algorithm of our brain. This is really good stuff!

  • @thishandleistacken
    @thishandleistackenАй бұрын

    It's fun seeing all the stuff my dad did when I was young to teach me about his job in neuropsychology (he worked primarily with Dr. Brenda Milner and was one of the docs working with HM)

  • @ehfik
    @ehfik14 күн бұрын

    beautiful!

  • @bitterbum1
    @bitterbum1Ай бұрын

    I wonder how this could relate to the anecdotal recollections from people struggling with different psychiatric illnesses/afflictions, and their resulting radical shifts of perspective after taking (often accidentally) high dosages of hallucinogens. Not that the change is always good or bad, but just radical change in perspective in general. If the brain updates itself with this balance of "generative model" vs. "sensory input," it seems that radical perturbations to either really changes our "internal judge" that assigns weights to either. On the other side of the same coin would be when we receive extreme sensory input (which we are unable to immediately justify with our internal models), that would result in PTSD--where we now expect this input to occur again despite it being very unlikely. Could we perturb the system (either through modifying the internal model or by controlling sensory input) to recalibrate the judge?

  • @Iamthepossum

    @Iamthepossum

    Ай бұрын

    My goodness this is profound; thank you for sharing

  • @subhuman3408
    @subhuman3408Ай бұрын

    Predictions error leads to action 14:14 Just like Scientific models 21:45 Same as neural network weighing 23:34 You need draw from fragments to get hidden 58:18

  • @kirkwagner461
    @kirkwagner461Ай бұрын

    This makes a TON of sense to me, based on a lot of my own observations and experiences.

  • @VYBEKAT
    @VYBEKATАй бұрын

    hitting the ground hard enough to punch a screw (clearly visible in the picture) through multiple layers of thick rubber and leather is going to hurt regardless of not having been pierced by the object

  • @svenicarus4872

    @svenicarus4872

    22 күн бұрын

    I looked into it, expecting to see that maybe the pain subsided after removal of the nail from the boot, yet there was no such thing. The case study is basically just a mere few lines in an aside of the BMJ. Crazy that it even got published in a peer reviewed journal and is related by a scientist in a lecture. Just shows how even clever people can be subject to trickery. Then again, none of the illusions worked on me so maybe I’m just smarter than I think. Or dumber than I think as whatever the brain is doing to the illusions isn’t happening in my own perceptions. I don’t know. Je ne sais pas. I know that so I’m smart!

  • @annajoythigpenhunt
    @annajoythigpenhuntАй бұрын

    This is amazing- thank you for this talk. Also: this guy looks like British Joel McHale

  • @FaughtyEmit
    @FaughtyEmitАй бұрын

    I'd love to hear a talk on the overlap between this topic and religious experience.

  • @jamesralston5293
    @jamesralston5293Ай бұрын

    I have been reading Mark Soams. This is very confirmatory.

  • @neilgadsby3924
    @neilgadsby3924Ай бұрын

    Very interesting. Thanks.

  • @klaushermann6760
    @klaushermann6760Ай бұрын

    I came here to relate that talk to how LLMs work, and our brains work similarly to every LLMs out there!

  • @helmutgensen4738
    @helmutgensen473823 күн бұрын

    Quite stimulating to the predictive neurons shaped by error-correction and deciding to buy your book (plus Lisa Barrett's 'How Emotions Are Made') - thanks. If I may be so bold... most of my existence has been dedicated to lifestyle photography - with the gutreaction 'not the leather bowtie and black silky shirt with the tartan suit'. May I suggest shifting the Andy Clark professorial attire to - somewhere between Jordan Peterson suave, and say Malcolm Mclaren cool? (I'm thinking Andy Warhol chique). You only live once or as my friend with MS puts it "You're gonna be dead for a long time".

  • @larcomj
    @larcomjАй бұрын

    really cool talk. this reminds me of the book "on intelligence"

  • @onionknight2239
    @onionknight2239Ай бұрын

    "What's going on" lol. Great presentation 👍

  • @mut8inG
    @mut8inGАй бұрын

    You get what you concentrate upon, oh! creator you of your reality. peace+&-🎶🌸

  • @davidabair2280
    @davidabair2280Ай бұрын

    I have a six string electric guitar that has a computer built in. It will mimic 36 guitars. When I have it set to a 12 string guitar my fingers feel a if I’m playing a 12 string even though I’m playing a six string. I owned a 12 string many years ago so I know how it feels harder to play than a 6 string. I feel as if it’s taking more effort to play to 12 string sound even though I playing a 6 string with light gaged strings. My brain is reacting to my expectations. This video helps me make sense of this phenomenon.

  • @ginogarcia8730
    @ginogarcia8730Ай бұрын

    Could prediction error be the basis for comedy where you expect one thing but something totally new comes

  • @Safetytrousers

    @Safetytrousers

    Ай бұрын

    Comedy involves a different level of predictive thinking being confounded.

  • @JamesMoniyaw
    @JamesMoniyawАй бұрын

    I like drawing the inside of people houses because after just a couple times of being in your house I remember probably 90% of the homes I've been in .... also works for lakes and trails in my brain.

  • @sonyavincent7450

    @sonyavincent7450

    Ай бұрын

    Impressive 🎉

  • @imtubing
    @imtubingАй бұрын

    Thanks for making a tilting video, it was impossible to not bring back my attention to it hahah :D

  • @sharonfisher3179
    @sharonfisher3179Ай бұрын

    Love his suit!❤❤❤

  • @SheSweetLikSugarNSavage

    @SheSweetLikSugarNSavage

    Ай бұрын

    It is pretty funny. He looks like a ringmaster

  • @tc-s3510
    @tc-s351014 күн бұрын

    I think it should be stated CLEARLY that positive thinking and working to change brain patterns does NOT work on a lot of chronic pain people because there are MEDICAL reasons for the pain. I cannot tolerate pain medicine and, while I am able to manage my pain mentally on a daily basis, I am still in incredible pain. My pain levels have been tested and every single time they ask me how I'm even able to walk and function because I peg the machines out completely. My background includes years upon years of training and I was Even training for the Olympic Trials (swimming) before a truck ran into me and stopped my life. Swimming (any high level sport) is a lot of mental games to keep you going in high pain situations of grueling workouts. I'm lucky to have had that background, but my current walking pain level would put down the largest males. I've had 13 back surgeries of which 11 were performed WITHOUT anesthesia (I didn't tolerate it). I'm telling this because I have a great hold on mental control of my brain, but I'm still in horrible, horrible pain because the pain is medical. While some mental pain gymnastics can help some people, please do not insult any chronic pain suffering people by suggesting it's all in your head. We have been gaslighted enough and it never ends well.

  • @thewayfarer1571

    @thewayfarer1571

    8 күн бұрын

    I hear you ( for what it’s worth!)

  • @paulrapley1044
    @paulrapley1044Ай бұрын

    A good example in the first minute of how researchers' brains shape reality: as has already been observed by another respondent here, the offending object appears to close observers who've had any experience at all at constructing things to be not a nail but a screw. To some, a trivial distinction, but clear evidence of people seeing what they are told to expect, including, unfortunately or inevitably, the persuasive Andy Clark and, as it appears from our limited information, J. P. Fisher et al and their source.

  • @NishanthSalahudeen
    @NishanthSalahudeenАй бұрын

    4:26 this prediction is super easy to understand when happening on vision or sound or such primary perception. However, the samething happens in higher cognition as well. Thats how villains in your life are created usually. Some situation might have made someone behave in certainway which made us unhappy and we just remember them like "convex face", as if it is a given attribute of the person. From then on, even if we see a concave face (good behaviour), our brain will tell us "it must be convex " (bad somehow). Thus we cookup a story to justify it and behave accordingly to that person. Meanwhile the same thing is happening to the other as well due to your behaviour to them. From there on, its all downhill. Both become bad people to each other. So dont see this just as a curious experiment. Learn to see how it bites you in daily life!

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Ай бұрын

    Making predictions is a syntropic process -- teleological. Syntropy (prediction) is dual to increasing entropy -- the 4th law of thermodynamics! Teleological physics (syntropy) is dual to non teleological physics (entropy). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant.

  • @user-st7wb3yf3d
    @user-st7wb3yf3dАй бұрын

    What I've found is that when we go deeper into the mind, not the brain, there is a level of perception which is clear... for instance, seeing the future. The brain couldn't see the future unless it was considering such as probabilities. I'm talking seeing actual events which are beyond probability, beyond calculation. For instance, I foresaw an amusing event which was my brother dropping a £2 coin, on a certain street in Edinburgh. We don't live in Edinburgh, and I never knew he was going there that day. We just happened to bump into one another with our group of friends. Within minutes of meeting he was about to sneeze and pulled out a hanky, turning away from us, and out dropped a £2 coin. Yes, our everyday perception does work in a pretty deterministic manner, but that does not mean we are machines, nor limited to the factors of the past.

  • @W00PIE
    @W00PIEАй бұрын

    Great talk as usual, thanks for that. But please find someone who can put your videos online without these annoying interlacing artifacts.

  • @makeitreality457
    @makeitreality457Ай бұрын

    I was commercial fishing and I stepped on the gaff hook. It went right through my boot and through my big toe. The fleshy part. I just taped it up with some Ichthammol and electrical tape and kept fishing. Never thought once about it and it healed up fine.

  • @dionysusnow
    @dionysusnow25 күн бұрын

    There is a huge difference between a nail and a screw when it comes to something embedded in your foot. I speak from experience.

  • @MunkiZee
    @MunkiZee18 күн бұрын

    The video seems a little quiet, it is audible but I don't feel I can give it my full attention which is a shame because it's really interesting

  • @granduniversal
    @granduniversalАй бұрын

    I think this subject is very interesting for many reasons. One of those is how it has direct bearing upon American politics. In America, politics is split between two camps. The right side generally claims authority due to reason. Their form of reason may be religion based, but it is thought derived from a previous lesson or understanding rather than thought derived from experience. The left takes more from experience, and downgrades the right's understanding. When there is no direct way to get feedback, because feedback is only being gathered in expected places native to a particular side, then reality falls too far outside of expectation and people don't know what to do with it. They become more easily afraid. They fall back on tried ways, even if they can see they don't work. When that happens in the brain, we see it because we have a sense of an observer. There isn't so much of that if the reasoning side can't prove itself and has to resort to legal and political tricks to get what it wants. In other words, it can't change any, so it makes up conspiracy theories to explain why it appears wrong. It's Plato and Aristotle played out all over again. It's Galileo and the church, sometimes. Other times, the right can save the state a lot of money. We still need to spend more on basic research, but we have come a long way with what we are doing.

  • @jondor654
    @jondor65418 күн бұрын

    In the placebo trials , would or did the responding participants physiology correlate to a causal delta .

  • @simonstrandgaard5503
    @simonstrandgaard5503Ай бұрын

    The video file format seems interleaved, causing the rows to flicker. Please pick another video encoding next time.

  • @uriituw

    @uriituw

    Ай бұрын

    Yup.

  • @CauseOfFreedom-mc7fx
    @CauseOfFreedom-mc7fx6 күн бұрын

    Where is the QA part?

  • @marcdraco2189
    @marcdraco2189Ай бұрын

    Bloody hell, three examples and my brain was already starting to translate. The last one I got completely correct.

  • @oliverjamito9902
    @oliverjamito990218 күн бұрын

    Angels who persevere knows concerning farming!

  • @youtubelisk
    @youtubeliskАй бұрын

    I know this a great presentation but the suit is better🧐

  • @DJRCMACH
    @DJRCMACH24 күн бұрын

    As a cronic pain sufferer from back and neck injury of 27 years, no just no I push through serious pain every day, i do as ordinary healthy people do. I still ride motor cycle and do some physical work, Have worsened my condition over time and not sure my change in approach to its only pain not disfunction has been worth it sure it still hurts like a shin kicked into towbar and sometimes only hurts like a stubbed toe, (for reference broke distal carpal in right hand on motorcycle,( right hand does throttle and brake) then fixed it and rode it 160km to hospital for a 5 hour wait treated as sprain, the surprise at 3am on the radiographers face was expected, Ive done this pain thing a few times second time was only 60km Love the talk but doesnt really address the flip side of chronic pain and how taxing it is. lol my causes ( l5-S1, l4-l5, l3,l4 t5-t6 t6-t7....c2-c3 c5-c6 c6-c7 ) Be well and happy people

  • @mattgray666
    @mattgray666Ай бұрын

    Really interesting info, especially in the current AI research climate. Would be enrichtacular to see cases of genetic abnormalities affecting perception of nature. Sure, autism, but what about people with malformed receptors and such? Are there people who don't get all the different brain waves? So many questions.

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Ай бұрын

    Making predictions is a syntropic process -- teleological. Syntropy (prediction) is dual to increasing entropy -- the 4th law of thermodynamics! Teleological physics (syntropy) is dual to non teleological physics (entropy). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant.

  • @danielkorosec9944
    @danielkorosec9944Ай бұрын

    12:30 making predictions on brains figuring out reality depends on preassumptions, like brain’s processing structure is ground up cleared, but that isn’t the case. So when I see my surroundings, where is I, how is I split, when is consciousness involved ? By experiencing life consciousness forms and me results by biophysical conditions as well as surroundings having influenced my behaviors, and each characteristic is dependent around time, some are ahead and others controlling. It’s aa field 😅

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Ай бұрын

    Making predictions is a syntropic process -- teleological. Syntropy (prediction) is dual to increasing entropy -- the 4th law of thermodynamics! Teleological physics (syntropy) is dual to non teleological physics (entropy). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant.

  • @Safetytrousers

    @Safetytrousers

    Ай бұрын

    What has the likes of 'the irreversible component of its time evolution is in the direction of SEA compatible with the conservation constraints' have to do with any of this? What is going on is what is being explored, not the cause of what is going on.@@hyperduality2838

  • @richard_d_bird
    @richard_d_birdАй бұрын

    the problem of ai models generating what they call "hallucinations" might suggest some kind of lack of sophistication in this aspect of those artificial intelligences maybe, but it's interesting that the same kind of problem is common to them and the organic ones

  • @hyperduality2838
    @hyperduality2838Ай бұрын

    Making predictions is a syntropic process -- teleological. Syntropy (prediction) is dual to increasing entropy -- the 4th law of thermodynamics! Teleological physics (syntropy) is dual to non teleological physics (entropy). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant.

  • @marcdraco2189
    @marcdraco2189Ай бұрын

    I wish I could speak to Dr. Clark, I've got a project on that walks the line of fact/fiction and this is a huge part of it. A lucky day for me to chance across this! Like the time I was about hit a pedestrian and my foot was hitting the breaks before I even became aware of that's what I needed to do.

  • @chriscurry2496

    @chriscurry2496

    Ай бұрын

    I don’t know if it’s mentioned in this talk because I haven’t finished it yet, but every experiment involving our awareness has shown that we don’t become aware of our choices until AFTER the choice is made.

  • @chriscurry2496

    @chriscurry2496

    Ай бұрын

    … this applies to EVERY choice we make, by the way. Which defies most people’s view of the independence of their choices.

  • @marcdraco2189

    @marcdraco2189

    Ай бұрын

    It wasn't Chris, but I'm aware of the phenomenon and I'm one of those nhilists who believes there is no such thing as "free will".@@chriscurry2496

  • @tomhummel2641

    @tomhummel2641

    Ай бұрын

    Quite common, that experience. It's a reflex reaction. You did subconsciously analyze the traffic situation beforehand and knew what to do. It also indicates that you've had some hours of driving experience and could perform quite fast.

  • @marcdraco2189

    @marcdraco2189

    Ай бұрын

    @@tomhummel2641 brains are amazing, are they not?

  • @nancyroche9637
    @nancyroche9637Ай бұрын

    You're adorable and so interesting. Thank you for sharing your knowledge on this exciting topic.

  • @uriituw

    @uriituw

    Ай бұрын

    “Adorable”?

  • @korstmahler
    @korstmahlerАй бұрын

    Three of the six initial comments were engagement booster bots. Interesting. That aside, the basic process of the human brain hallucinating it's best approximation of reality isn't new to me. Brains being a predictive self-preservation system, self awareness grows from self-preservation, and thus sentience, and so too sapience. I'd like to talk with this man sometime.

  • @RootsEcho

    @RootsEcho

    Ай бұрын

    How can you tell whether comments are AI? My sarcasm sprouted from the darkest depths of my being, which, I must admit, doesn't exclude me from having AI. Fairly confident my I is N though

  • @korstmahler

    @korstmahler

    Ай бұрын

    @@RootsEchoThey gave themselves away by being identically formatted, one line of generic nondescript praise for the video that could apply to literally any video on YT, followed by a random positive emoji. They'd have looked 'vapid but real' if they hadn't all been posted within moments of the upload, and been verbal paletteswaps of each other

  • @Paul_Oz
    @Paul_OzАй бұрын

    what do you think the over/under is for when we have an ai running kind of a mid-layer interference on our reality perception knobs and dials? I mean, we're all gonna be sporting AI assistants very soon. It is going to become very apparent that if you can lick the security/privacy worries, there will be huge advantages to running your AI listening 24/7 in as many modalities and as sensitively as possible, more data - better model. We will gradually push our perceptions out from our meatwagons into the digital sphere. Wouldn't the natural user interface just be a finely attuned AI, with a copious and ongoing data stream about a person that also had suite of abilities with which to twist the knobs and dials of their perceptions and predictions? With a sophisticated enough model running the show and with enough time for the native brain to adapt and wire parallel to the AI's guidance, you could pretty much end up with Matrix level fidelity pretty quick.

  • @captainnemog1705
    @captainnemog1705Ай бұрын

    Didn't know James Gunn knew so much about the brain!

  • @steveosteveareno2670
    @steveosteveareno2670Ай бұрын

    Is anyone else thinking about the current polarized political perceptions in the US of A?

  • @styx1272
    @styx1272Ай бұрын

    Thanks for this very interesting. Expectation Motivation and Hypnosis Interesting area of mind research possibibly I had an annoying dispute in with a dentist a few years ago where I had a leaky filling that was aggravating the nerve. The dentist looked and xrayed and insisted there was no problem And I insisted it had been doing this for a few months And of course implied it was psychosomatic and I insisted And said I would pay for the filling even if there were no improvement. She consulted wth colleges came back and put the drill into the perfect filling and it collapsed into mush.. Yes I did really have a leaky filling and have had no problem with this tooth since. Unfortunately 'educated' professionals have a habit of consigning these things to the dustbin to maintain their model of the all knowing wise in control guru.

  • @frankzaffuto3670
    @frankzaffuto367026 күн бұрын

    24:28 Why would there need to be a variable balance if there was only one true ratio? The logic is sound

  • @geoff7727
    @geoff7727Күн бұрын

    this explains very well why people who have dmt breakthroughs have these crazy experiences. Drugs literally "drug" the brain to make it slow in it's perception of reality. That's why no matter how many things are seen on this "episodes" they are always similar things to what we have seen in our lives.

  • @MatsueMusic
    @MatsueMusicАй бұрын

    I cannot wait for this to make its way into medicine and psychology. Now that we know its inside-out, how could ADHD meds and other forms of medication change to take advantage of this?!

  • @amisfitpuivk
    @amisfitpuivkАй бұрын

    not sure if this is a new camera system, but my brain seems to be hallucinating a lot of shaking and it's jarring with all the text in this one

  • @Urania4007
    @Urania400718 күн бұрын

    Sounds so much like the way of generative AI (even quantum physics) -- it's all about prediction

  • @jondor654
    @jondor65418 күн бұрын

    Causal placebos actually contain an infinitesimal dilution of an infinite number of priors .

  • @mikoaj1321
    @mikoaj1321Ай бұрын

    It's very quiet. I can't grasp why after all these years KZread still can't figure out sound normalization.

  • @FueledbyJohn
    @FueledbyJohnАй бұрын

    Yes, funnily enough. I would there was a hole in my shoe the other week whilst walking / running with great ensuing pain fortunately it didnt persist and didnt go so far as to penetrate deeply into my foot.. I didnt require pain relief I just stopped checked my shoe, took it off and removed the obstruction and hobbled home. I plugged it with a glue gun afterwards. My watch vibrates to remind me to stand up, in addition to drink water.

  • @Vtwin_Superbikes
    @Vtwin_SuperbikesАй бұрын

    I somewhat concluded all this on a mushroom trip. Pain and stimuli are just messages and you don’t have to react. Allergens are just messages and you dont have to react… my airborne allergies are none existent now because i stopped snorting in or sniffing inwards, especially first thing when i wake up… i can breathe normally through the nose but never do a deep sniff to lodge stuff in the sinuses like a dog with scents. Always blow out, if your nose is running DONT sniff in, let a big mucus drip fall down 😂

  • @lisamoag6548

    @lisamoag6548

    27 күн бұрын

    And, please get a tissue.

  • @signaldrift2274
    @signaldrift2274Ай бұрын

    If, autism leans toward an overload of sensory input and, I believe, conditions of psychopathy have an insensitivity to sensory input and a dominance of internal models, is it perhaps that the two condition are the reversals of each other, and normality a mid- point balanced between the two ?

  • @orbismworldbuilding8428

    @orbismworldbuilding8428

    Ай бұрын

    Thats an interesting idea Maybe mechanism-wise, though cause-wise can be different

  • @signaldrift2274

    @signaldrift2274

    Ай бұрын

    yes @@orbismworldbuilding8428

  • @jackhsiehhautecouture
    @jackhsiehhautecoutureАй бұрын

    Wow I’m early for this upload. Hai people🎉🎉🎉 love a subscriber

  • @NishanthSalahudeen
    @NishanthSalahudeenАй бұрын

    50:52 that must be one way in which prayer helps...when it does seem to

  • @Ef554rgcc
    @Ef554rgccАй бұрын

    I thought I found a way out of intense think. Somehow that YT algo brings me back.

  • @user-ke1qj4nk2z
    @user-ke1qj4nk2z25 күн бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ Geniune construction and Dramatic cases 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @uriituw
    @uriituwАй бұрын

    My brain had to expend a lot of energy in order to internally de-interlace this video.

  • @monkerud2108
    @monkerud2108Ай бұрын

    the way autism is diagnosed however means that we cannot really determine whether it is about weighing too much sensory information in all cases, we have to sides that can go wrong in multiple ways, and so autism as diagnosed picks out a grouping of different conditions of a brain and labels them with the same label, but it is not necessarily the case that all people who have features of autism related to more attention to sensory data that leads to a worse model of social dynamics, it might be the case that a person with exactly an enhanced attention to sensory information might still attain a better model of the social dynamics and the reasons why people act the way they do why they give of the signals they do and so on. whether the expectations and predictions we form as conscious thoughts are more or less accurate has less to do with whether we act in such a social dynamic in a way that is understood by others to be better integrated into their understanding compared to someone who understands less about the reasons for why people act and think the way they do. that is, a person might feel an inability to communicate effectively and be understood by others less often, not because they have a worse model of what the other person is thinking necessarily, but because they understand that the model of the other is unpredictable and strange, fickle even, and then they can become unsure of what to say to them for fear that it will be interpreted wrong, leading to a more withdrawn communication, while others might be confidently wrong but achieve a more natural communication because they just run with their model on their side and so does their conversation partners, as long as the two sides of communication roughly experience the other as conforming with their model then the differences between what person a thinks they said and what person b hears them say, might never actually be resolved and might actually never need to be resolved for both parties to think that it is resolved. with straight forward concepts like wanting to go to a party, or something like that, it might not be an issue, but when it comes to explaining a feeling or concept it might not ever be reconciled even if both parties think it is. i feel like most people do not understand each other very well, even when they are functioning well socially, because they run with their own models and add some humor and common elements, both people presume to understand each other well, and it goes well as long as the deviation is not as great as to come to a conflict, but this happens all the time, when people end up with different impressions, and that is not always because one person is autistic, it is very common for these sorts of conflicts to arise almost out of nowhere, and i don't mean serious personal conflicts only also just very different understandings of what is going on and what people actually think was discussed and so on. i think that autistic and non autistic people can both be heightened in the attention to sensory information, and can both be heightened in model quality and model reliance, ofc it is probably more common for autistic people to have heightened reliance on sensory input, it might be a universal feature of the diagnosis, but the diagnosis is not nailed down to a common cause like with cancer, where the diagnosis can be set by analysis of some biological marker for example, it and a lot of other diagnoses are characterized by experience and behavior, which is in my opinion not all that good, it really can lead to a failure in differentiating between people with common symptoms of behavior but that have very different brains and very different needs, and this applies to people who have no formal diagnosis as well i think, the way each of our brain works is subtly different, and is served best by different help.

  • @spocksdaughter9641

    @spocksdaughter9641

    Ай бұрын

    Brillently puts! May I disclose (now age 73 dx Aspergers ...by accident age 56) I spend more and more effort being tolerant-forgiving (I hope w out sense of superiority) enduring the superficiality esp lack of curiosity the life lived playing a 'part'. At least mod Western culture in general. I wonder if you marvel at "the rest of the story" so to speak when you 'observe' or participation? That is what your comment seemed to speak to me. For me I have to be very careful to not intuit too much or at least not share or use it openly with someone else in interaction. ie knowing a 'Them' they trusted to be private. I feel hurt when they shrink having become very uncomfortable. I figure out some time ago my very being sets most on guard or alert though they cannot put a finger on just why. They sense I am not same. I have figured out how to dumb down. Always been very outgoing. It is very lonely and I hate 'making nice'. Or feel like a fool afterward having made the effort to play the game.

  • @orbismworldbuilding8428

    @orbismworldbuilding8428

    Ай бұрын

    Thing is thats a problem in kinda all the neurological things that aren't simple brain damage. As for autism 200 (possibly more by now) genetic markers have been identified and there are noted features of brain structure in scans that are common and can be attributed to different traits. Also, cancer isn't a single illness, its countless that have a number of different but usually well understood causes. Autism seems to mostly be genetic, and have usually the same external traits and brain structures, mainly the brain not purging connections and growth happening much sooner, with poorer long-range connections. Long range connections usually create skills and processing and top-down thinking where you learn concepts first details and sensations later. Its pretty close to all figured out, its as figured out as most normative features like height or body proportions or such.

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