Article 3Z4SE How External Sensory Expectations Give Context to How the Brain Predictively Perceives Information

How External Sensory Expectations Give Context to How the Brain Predictively Perceives Information

by
Lori Dorn
from Laughing Squid on (#3Z4SE)
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In a thought-provoking animation by Lazy Chief for FOST (Future of Storytelling), neuroscientist Anil Seth explains how the brain engages with the constantly input of external stimulation. He specifically focuses on how the brain predictively perceives an object or situation, but is dependent upon sensory experience and expectation to give context to the situation. Seth used the 2015 meme "What Color is This Dress" as an example of a experience/perception mismatch. Essentially, the expected position of overhead lighting in the room influenced how the brain perceived the colors.

Neuroscientist Anil Seth explains how what we perceive isn't an accurate reflection of a real, externally existing world. In fact, perception and hallucination are based on similar processes-they are our brain's interpretation of myriad inputs. His groundbreaking research provides fascinating insight into what this means for storytelling.

xkcd-Dress.png?w=750

via Vimeo Staff Picks

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