Habitual and Reflective Control in Hierarchical Predictive Coding
Artificial Intelligence
2021-09-03 v1 Neurons and Cognition
Abstract
In cognitive science, behaviour is often separated into two types. Reflexive control is habitual and immediate, whereas reflective is deliberative and time consuming. We examine the argument that Hierarchical Predictive Coding (HPC) can explain both types of behaviour as a continuum operating across a multi-layered network, removing the need for separate circuits in the brain. On this view, "fast" actions may be triggered using only the lower layers of the HPC schema, whereas more deliberative actions need higher layers. We demonstrate that HPC can distribute learning throughout its hierarchy, with higher layers called into use only as required.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2109.00866,
title = {Habitual and Reflective Control in Hierarchical Predictive Coding},
author = {Paul F. Kinghorn and Beren Millidge and Christopher L. Buckley},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2109.00866},
year = {2021}
}
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02/09/2021 Initial Upload