
Contents
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1 Embodied Perception 1 Embodied Perception
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Concept-empiricism Concept-empiricism
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The rejection of the computational approach to perception The rejection of the computational approach to perception
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2 The Two-visual Systems Model of Human Vision 2 The Two-visual Systems Model of Human Vision
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An anatomical bifurcation in the primate visual system An anatomical bifurcation in the primate visual system
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Neuropsychological dissociations Neuropsychological dissociations
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Psychophysical dissociations in healthy participants Psychophysical dissociations in healthy participants
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3 The Enactive Approach to Object-Perception 3 The Enactive Approach to Object-Perception
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Can enactivism be a constitutive account of perceptual experience? Can enactivism be a constitutive account of perceptual experience?
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Enactivism and behaviourism Enactivism and behaviourism
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An externalist account of perceptual experience An externalist account of perceptual experience
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4 Action-Based Accounts of Social Perception 4 Action-Based Accounts of Social Perception
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Action-mirroring Action-mirroring
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The scope and limits of mirroring-based accounts of social perception The scope and limits of mirroring-based accounts of social perception
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5 Concluding Remarks 5 Concluding Remarks
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References References
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12 Action-Based Accounts of Perception
Get accessPierre Jacob, Institut Jean-Nicod
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Published:16 December 2013
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Abstract
There are two main motivations for action-based approaches to perception: the parsimonious assumption that action and perception belong to a single overlapping functional system and the tendency to minimize the load of internal processing in perception. For example, according to the ecological paradigm, visual perception consists in detecting affordances for action. Many advocates of action-based accounts of perception reject the computational/representational approach and embrace instead an embodied approach to perception and an empiricist view of the contents of concepts. For example, enactivists argue for constitutive links between an agent’s bodily movements and the content of her perceptual experiences. While, enactivism is not easy to reconcile with evidence for the two-visual systems model of human vision, further support for action-based accounts of social perception has been derived from the discovery of mirror neurons and mirroring processes.
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