Litcius/Paper detail

Surprise! Why enactivism and predictive processing are parting ways: The case of improvisation

Shaun Gallagher

2022Possibility Studies & Society15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Can we explain how the various factors of knowledge, skill, habit, environmental constraints and affordances interact or integrate in improvisational performance? In attempting to explain how this integration takes place, I’ll consider two possible approaches: predictive processing (PP) and enactivism. I’ll argue that PP, which, on a neuroscientific view, conceives of the mind as set up to avoid surprise, will not be able to explain improvisation if it remains true to its own principles. In contrast, I’ll argue, enactivism, as a form of embodied cognition that takes the explanatory unit to be the brain-body environment, can offer a better explanation of improvisation. I’ll also argue that the notion of habit is central to this account.

Topics & Concepts

EnactivismImprovisationSurpriseNeurophenomenologyEmbodied cognitionCognitive sciencePsychologyEpistemologyAutopoiesisCognitive psychologySet (abstract data type)PhilosophyComputer scienceSocial psychologyProgramming languageVisual artsArtEmbodied and Extended CognitionNeural dynamics and brain functionAction Observation and Synchronization