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Christopher J Whyte

Monash Centre for Consciousness & Contemplative Studies, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia; Neuroscience Research Theme, School of Medical Sciences, University of Sydney, Australia; Centre for Complex Systems, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.

1 paper in the library · 5 citations · publishing 2026

Papers

On the minimal theory of consciousness implicit in active inference.

Physics of life reviews March 1, 2026 Christopher J Whyte, Andrew W Corcoran, Jonathan Robinson et al. 5 citations

Subjective experience is multifaceted, making it hard for traditional neuroscientific theories of consciousness to be compared because each focuses on different aspects like perceptual awareness or global states. This work instead starts from active inference, a first-principles framework that models behavior as approximate Bayesian inference, and builds a minimal theory of consciousness from shared features of computational models derived under active inference. By reviewing studies that apply active inference models to consciousness, the authors identify a small set of theoretical commitments implicit in these models, pointing toward a minimal and testable theory of consciousness.