Publications by authors named "Tom Froese"

It has been repeatedly reported that the collective dynamics of social insects exhibit universal emergent properties similar to other complex systems. In this note, we study a previously published data set in which the positions of thousands of honeybees in a hive are individually tracked over multiple days. The results show that the hive dynamics exhibit long-range spatial and temporal correlations in the occupancy density fluctuations, despite the characteristic short-range bees' mutual interactions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The Perceptual Crossing Device (PCD) is a new tool that allows researchers to study brain activity during real-time human interactions with EEG integration.
  • It features haptic and auditory feedback for two users in a virtual environment, enhancing the experience of interaction through intuitive circular motion controls.
  • By making research more accessible, the PCD aims to deepen our understanding of human interactions and promote community engagement in cognitive science studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cognitive science is confronted by several fundamental anomalies deriving from the mind-body problem. Most prominent is the problem of mental causation and the hard problem of consciousness, which can be generalized into the hard problem of agential efficacy and the hard problem of mental content. Here, it is proposed to accept these explanatory gaps at face value and to take them as positive indications of a complex relation: mind and matter are one, but they are not the same.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hyperscanning approaches to human neuroscience aim to uncover the neural mechanisms of social interaction. They have been largely guided by the expectation that increased levels of engagement between two persons will be supported by higher levels of inter-brain synchrony (IBS). A common approach to measuring IBS is phase synchrony in the context of EEG hyperscanning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It has been repeatedly reported that the collective dynamics of social insects exhibit universal emergent properties similar to other complex systems. In this note, we study a previously published data set in which the positions of thousands of honeybees in a hive are individually tracked over multiple days. The results show that the hive dynamics exhibit long-range spatial and temporal correlations in the occupancy density fluctuations, despite the characteristic short-range bees' mutual interactions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The theory of autopoiesis has been influential in many areas of theoretical biology, especially in the fields of artificial life and origins of life. However, it has not managed to productively connect with mainstream biology, partly for theoretical reasons, but arguably mainly because deriving specific working hypotheses has been challenging. The theory has recently undergone significant conceptual development in the enactive approach to life and mind.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Online communication technologies can help regulate emotions, but they also present risks that can lead to emotional struggles, especially during times like the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • The study identifies five key areas—infrastructure, functional use, mindful design, and digital tact—where these emotional challenges arise and how they are interconnected.
  • The research highlights the need for better understanding and development of online communication tools to improve emotional well-being for individuals and communities moving forward.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cognitive science is lacking conceptual tools to describe how an agent's motivations, as such, can play a role in the generation of its behavior. The enactive approach has made progress by developing a relaxed naturalism, and by placing normativity at the core of life and mind; all cognitive activity is a kind of motivated activity. It has rejected representational architectures, especially their reification of the role of normativity into localized "value" functions, in favor of accounts that appeal to system-level properties of the organism.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The origins of life research often sees early life as a passive response to environmental conditions, but this paper suggests that the early precursors of life actively regulated their surroundings for their survival.
  • The concept of 'viability-based behaviour' is introduced, showing how simple entities can adaptively manage their environment based on their health to enhance their chances of survival.
  • The authors argue that these basic self-preserving behaviors could have occurred before neo-Darwinian evolution, potentially easing the environmental constraints faced by mainstream theories regarding the emergence of life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Social insects such as honey bees exhibit complex behavioral patterns, and their distributed behavioral coordination enables decision-making at the colony level. It has, therefore, been proposed that a high-level description of their collective behavior might share commonalities with the dynamics of neural processes in brains. Here, we investigated this proposal by focusing on the possibility that brains are poised at the edge of a critical phase transition and that such a state is enabling increased computational power and adaptability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Biological agents can act in ways that express a sensitivity to context-dependent relevance. So far it has proven difficult to engineer this capacity for context-dependent sensitivity to relevance in artificial agents. We give this problem the label the "problem of meaning".

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Perceptual Crossing Experiment (PCE) captures the capacity for social contingency detection using real-time social interaction dynamics but has not been externally validated. We tested ecological and convergent validity of the PCE in a sample of 208 adolescents from the general population, aged 11 to 19 years. We expected associations between PCE performance and (a) quantity and quality of social interaction in daily life, using Experience Sampling Methodology (ESM; ecological validity) and (b) self-reported social skills using a questionnaire (convergent validity).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The social brain hypothesis proposes that enlarged brains have evolved in response to the increasing cognitive demands that complex social life in larger groups places on primates and other mammals. However, this reasoning can be challenged by evidence that brain size has decreased in the evolutionary transitions from solitary to social larger groups in the case of Neolithic humans and some eusocial insects. Different hypotheses can be identified in the literature to explain this reduction in brain size.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Modeling of complex adaptive systems has revealed a still poorly understood benefit of unsupervised learning: when neural networks are enabled to form an associative memory of a large set of their own attractor configurations, they begin to reorganize their connectivity in a direction that minimizes the coordination constraints posed by the initial network architecture. This self-optimization process has been replicated in various neural network formalisms, but it is still unclear whether it can be applied to biologically more realistic network topologies and scaled up to larger networks. Here we continue our efforts to respond to these challenges by demonstrating the process on the connectome of the widely studied nematode worm .

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Serotonergic agonist psilocybin is a psychedelic with antidepressant potential. Sleep may interact with psilocybin's antidepressant properties like other antidepressant drugs via induction of neuroplasticity. The main aim of the study was to evaluate the effect of psilocybin on sleep architecture on the night after psilocybin administration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The enactive theory of perception hypothesizes that perceptual access to objects depends on the mastery of sensorimotor contingencies, that is, on the know-how of the regular ways in which changes in sensations depend on changes in movements. This hypothesis can be extended into the social domain: perception of other minds is constituted by mastery of self-other contingencies, that is, by the know-how of the regular ways in which changes in others' movements depend on changes in one's movements. We investigated this proposal using the perceptual crossing paradigm, in which pairs of players are required to locate each other in an invisible one-dimensional virtual space by using a minimal haptic interface.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The association between neural oscillations and functional integration is widely recognized in the study of human cognition. Large-scale synchronization of neural activity has also been proposed as the neural basis of consciousness. Intriguingly, a growing number of studies in social cognitive neuroscience reveal that phase synchronization similarly appears across brains during meaningful social interaction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Enactive cognitive science (ECS) and ecological psychology (EP) agree that active movement is important for perception, but they remain ambiguous regarding the precise role of agency. EP has focused on the notion of sensorimotor invariants, according to which bodily movements play an instrumental role in perception. ECS has focused on the notion of sensorimotor contingencies, which goes beyond an instrumental role because skillfully regulated movements are claimed to play a constitutive role.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on how adolescents detect social interactions in real-time using a virtual task.
  • Participants, aged 12 to 19, showed improved accuracy in recognizing each other through tactile feedback over six rounds of the experiment.
  • The findings indicate that the six-round version of the task is effective for studying social behavior in adolescents, similar to earlier research conducted on adults.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The review addresses key philosophical challenges in origins-of-life research, including debates on the definitions of life and the methodologies for investigating its origins amid a lack of consensus on a universal theory.
  • It highlights important distinctions between different research approaches, such as synthetic, historical, and universal, while discussing the implications of the "bottom up" and "top down" strategies for understanding the first living entities and the last universal common ancestor.
  • The historical context of origins-of-life studies is explored, detailing influential figures and theories that have shaped the field, emphasizing how philosophical perspectives have evolved alongside scientific advancements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF