
Contents
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12.1 Introduction and overview 12.1 Introduction and overview
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12.2 Compositional motor control in the brain 12.2 Compositional motor control in the brain
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12.2.1 Muscles and the spinal cord 12.2.1 Muscles and the spinal cord
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12.2.2 Motorcortex and beyond 12.2.2 Motorcortex and beyond
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12.3 Computational motor control 12.3 Computational motor control
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12.3.1 Models of online motor control 12.3.1 Models of online motor control
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12.3.2 Models of decision making 12.3.2 Models of decision making
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12.3.3 Action and motor control components 12.3.3 Action and motor control components
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12.3.4 Decision making components 12.3.4 Decision making components
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12.4 Event-oriented conceptualizations 12.4 Event-oriented conceptualizations
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12.4.1 Events and event segmentations 12.4.1 Events and event segmentations
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12.4.2 Event taxonomy 12.4.2 Event taxonomy
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12.4.3 Event conceptualizations and abstractions 12.4.3 Event conceptualizations and abstractions
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12.5 Summary and conclusions 12.5 Summary and conclusions
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12.6 Exercises 12.6 Exercises
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12 Decision Making, Control, and Concept Formation
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Published:January 2017
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Abstract
While attention controls the internal, mental focus of attention, motor control directs the bodily control focus. Our nervous system is structured in a cascade of interactive control loops, where the primary self-stabilizing control loops can be found directly in the body’s morphology and the muscles themselves. The hierarchical structure enables flexible and selective motor control and the invocation of motor primitives and motor complexes. The learning of motor primitives and complexes again adheres to certain computational systematicities. Redundant behavioral alternatives are encoded in an abstract manner, enabling fast habitual decision making and slower, more elaborated planning processes for realizing context-dependent behavior adaptations. On a higher level, behavior can be segmented into events, during which a particular behavior unfolds, and event boundaries, which characterize the beginning or the end of a behavior. Combinations of events and event boundaries yield event schemata. Hierarchical combinations of event schemata on shorter and longer time scales yield event taxonomies. When developing event boundary detectors, our mind begins to develop environmental conceptualizations. Evidence is available that suggests that such event-oriented conceptualizations are inherently semantic and closely related to linguistic, generative models. Thus, by optimizing behavioral versatility and developing progressively more abstract codes of environmental interactions and manipulations, cognitive encodings develop, which are supporting symbol grounding and grammatical language development.
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