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The Sensorimotor Account of Sensory Consciousness: Implications for Machine Consciousness

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
The Sensorimotor Account of Sensory Consciousness: Implications for Machine Consciousness
Abstract
When people speak about consciousness, they distinguish various types and different levels, and they argue for different concepts of cognition. This complicates the discussion about artificial or machine consciousness. Here we take a bottom-up approach to this question by presenting a family of robot experiments that invite us to think about consciousness in the context of artificial agents. The experiments are based on a computational model of sensorimotor contingencies. It has been suggested that these regularities in the sensorimotor flow of an agent can explain raw feels and perceptual consciousness in biological agents. We discuss the validity of the model with respect to sensorimotor contingency theory and consider whether a robot that is controlled by knowledge of its sensorimotor contingencies could have any form of consciousness. We propose that consciousness does not require higher-order thought or higher-order representations. Rather, we argue that consciousness starts when (i) an agent actively (endogenously triggered) uses its knowledge of sensorimotor contingencies to issue predictions and (ii) when it deploys this capability to structure subsequent action.
Publication
Journal of Consciousness Studies
Volume
23
Issue
5-6
Pages
177-202
Date
2016-01-01
Journal Abbr
Journal of Consciousness Studies
Short Title
The Sensorimotor Account of Sensory Consciousness
Library Catalog
IngentaConnect
Citation
Maye, A., & Engel, A. K. (2016). The Sensorimotor Account of Sensory Consciousness: Implications for Machine Consciousness. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 23(5–6), 177–202.