The Modern Legacy of Gibson's Affordances for the Sciences of Organisms, 2024
In the ecological approach to perception and action, information that specifies affordances is av... more In the ecological approach to perception and action, information that specifies affordances is available in the energy arrays surrounding organisms, and this information is detected by organisms in order to perceptually guide their actions. At the behavioral scale, organisms responding to affordances are understood as self-organizing and reorganizing softly-assembled synergies. Within the ecological community, little effort has so far been devoted to studying this process at the neural scale, though interest in the topic is growing under the header of ecological neuroscience. From this perspective, switches between affordances may be conceptualized as transitions within brain-body-environment systems as a whole rather than under the control of a privileged (neural) scale. We discuss extant empirical research at the behavioral scale in support of this view as well as ongoing and planned work at the neural scale that attempts to further flesh out this view by characterizing the neural dynamics that are associated with these transitions while participants dynamically respond to affordances.
The Modern Legacy of Gibson's Affordances for the Sciences of Organisms, 2024
In the ecological approach to perception and action, information that specifies affordances is av... more In the ecological approach to perception and action, information that specifies affordances is available in the energy arrays surrounding organisms, and this information is detected by organisms in order to perceptually guide their actions. At the behavioral scale, organisms responding to affordances are understood as self-organizing and reorganizing softly-assembled synergies. Within the ecological community, little effort has so far been devoted to studying this process at the neural scale, though interest in the topic is growing under the header of ecological neuroscience. From this perspective, switches between affordances may be conceptualized as transitions within brain-body-environment systems as a whole rather than under the control of a privileged (neural) scale. We discuss extant empirical research at the behavioral scale in support of this view as well as ongoing and planned work at the neural scale that attempts to further flesh out this view by characterizing the neural dynamics that are associated with these transitions while participants dynamically respond to affordances.
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Papers by Vicente Raja