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Guido Schillaci

2 papers in the library · 17 citations · publishing 2020-2021

Papers

Computational models of the "active self" and its disturbances in schizophrenia.

Consciousness and cognition August 1, 2021 Tim Julian Möller, Yasmin Kim Georgie, Guido Schillaci et al. 16 citations

Self-disorders are increasingly seen as the root cause of schizophrenia, not merely a symptom. This aligns with philosophical views of an enactive self, formed through action and interaction. The authors analyze definitions of the self and evaluate computational theories, particularly Bayesian and predictive processing approaches, for modeling the active self. They assess the implementation and challenges of these models in computational psychiatry and cognitive developmental robotics. Embodied robotic systems are described as valuable tools for assessing, validating, and simulating mechanisms of self-disorders, especially those involving sensorimotor learning, prediction, and self-other distinction. This link offers insights into self-formation and new avenues for treating psychiatric disorders.

Prerequisites for an Artificial Self.

Frontiers in neurorobotics January 1, 2020 Verena V Hafner, Pontus Loviken, Antonio Pico Villalpando et al. 1 citation

Body ownership and agency are two main components of the minimal self, traditionally studied in philosophy but now also in cognitive science and robotics. This review argues that mechanisms for developing motor and cognitive skills in robots also lay the foundation for an artificial self. It examines developmental processes of the minimal self in biological systems, transfers those principles to robotics, and suggests metrics for measuring agency and body ownership in an artificial self.