Literature DB >> 18394222

The shared circuits model (SCM): how control, mirroring, and simulation can enable imitation, deliberation, and mindreading.

Susan Hurley1.   

Abstract

Imitation, deliberation, and mindreading are characteristically human sociocognitive skills. Research on imitation and its role in social cognition is flourishing across various disciplines. Imitation is surveyed in this target article under headings of behavior, subpersonal mechanisms, and functions of imitation. A model is then advanced within which many of the developments surveyed can be located and explained. The shared circuits model (SCM) explains how imitation, deliberation, and mindreading can be enabled by subpersonal mechanisms of control, mirroring, and simulation. It is cast at a middle, functional level of description, that is, between the level of neural implementation and the level of conscious perceptions and intentional actions. The SCM connects shared informational dynamics for perception and action with shared informational dynamics for self and other, while also showing how the action/perception, self/other, and actual/possible distinctions can be overlaid on these shared informational dynamics. It avoids the common conception of perception and action as separate and peripheral to central cognition. Rather, it contributes to the situated cognition movement by showing how mechanisms for perceiving action can be built on those for active perception.;>;>The SCM is developed heuristically, in five layers that can be combined in various ways to frame specific ontogenetic or phylogenetic hypotheses. The starting point is dynamic online motor control, whereby an organism is closely attuned to its embedding environment through sensorimotor feedback. Onto this are layered functions of prediction and simulation of feedback, mirroring, simulation of mirroring, monitored inhibition of motor output, and monitored simulation of input. Finally, monitored simulation of input specifying possible actions plus inhibited mirroring of such possible actions can generate information about the possible as opposed to actual instrumental actions of others, and the possible causes and effects of such possible actions, thereby enabling strategic social deliberation. Multiple instances of such shared circuits structures could be linked into a network permitting decomposition and recombination of elements, enabling flexible control, imitative learning, understanding of other agents, and instrumental and strategic deliberation. While more advanced forms of social cognition, which require tracking multiple others and their multiple possible actions, may depend on interpretative theorizing or language, the SCM shows how layered mechanisms of control, mirroring, and simulation can enable distinctively human cognitive capacities for imitation, deliberation, and mindreading.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18394222     DOI: 10.1017/S0140525X07003123

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Brain Sci        ISSN: 0140-525X            Impact factor:   12.579


  41 in total

1.  Brain mechanisms for predictive control by switching internal models: implications for higher-order cognitive functions.

Authors:  Hiroshi Imamizu; Mitsuo Kawato
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2009-04-04

2.  Thinking as the control of imagination: a conceptual framework for goal-directed systems.

Authors:  Giovanni Pezzulo; Cristiano Castelfranchi
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2009-04-04

3.  Inhibition of imitative behaviour and social cognition.

Authors:  Marcel Brass; Perrine Ruby; Stephanie Spengler
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2009-08-27       Impact factor: 6.237

Review 4.  Imitation as an inheritance system.

Authors:  Nicholas Shea
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2009-08-27       Impact factor: 6.237

5.  Evolution of a predictive internal model in an embodied and situated agent.

Authors:  Onofrio Gigliotta; Giovanni Pezzulo; Stefano Nolfi; Sefano Nolfi
Journal:  Theory Biosci       Date:  2011-05-22       Impact factor: 1.919

Review 6.  Rhythm in joint action: psychological and neurophysiological mechanisms for real-time interpersonal coordination.

Authors:  Peter E Keller; Giacomo Novembre; Michael J Hove
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2014-12-19       Impact factor: 6.237

Review 7.  A review of ideomotor approaches to perception, cognition, action, and language: advancing a cultural recycling hypothesis.

Authors:  Arnaud Badets; Iring Koch; Andrea M Philipp
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2014-12-23

8.  The Two-Level Theory of verb meaning: An approach to integrating the semantics of action with the mirror neuron system.

Authors:  David Kemmerer; Javier Gonzalez-Castillo
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2008-11-08       Impact factor: 2.381

9.  Virtual Lesions of the IFG Abolish Response Facilitation for Biological and Non-Biological Cues.

Authors:  Roger D Newman-Norlund; Sasha Ondobaka; Hein T van Schie; Gijs van Elswijk; Harold Bekkering
Journal:  Front Behav Neurosci       Date:  2010-03-03       Impact factor: 3.558

10.  Modulation of perception and brain activity by predictable trajectories of facial expressions.

Authors:  N Furl; N J van Rijsbergen; S J Kiebel; K J Friston; A Treves; R J Dolan
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2009-07-17       Impact factor: 5.357

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