Title: Sensory modalities
1Sensory modalities
2ORegan, J. K., Noe, A., A sensorimotor account
of vision and visual consciousness
- Behavioral and Brain sciences (2001), 245
3Unsignificant internal architecture
- There is no internal representations or
architecture to explain the conscious quality of
different sensations - From the point of view of the brain there is
nothing that in itself differentiates nervous
influx coming from retinal, haptic,
proprioceptive, auditory, and other senses - Even if the size, shape, firing patterns, places
wqwhere neurons are localized in the cortex
differ, this does not, in itself confer them with
any particular visual, olfactory, motor or other
perceptual qualities
4Sensorimotor contingencies
- What does explain the differences between
sensations is the structure of the rules
governing the sensory changes produced by various
motor actions sensorimotor contingencies - Within different sensory modalities, sensorimotor
contingencies differ because they are subject to
different invariance properties - Each sensory modality is defined by a particular
structure of the rules governing sensoru changes
produced by movement - Sensory modalities are modes of exploration of
the world mediated by knowledge of sensorimotor
contingencies
5Classes of sensorimotor contingency
- We can destinguish between 2 classes of
sensorimotor contingency - Sensorimotor contingencies determined by the
character of the visual apparatus (the eye is a
kind of sphere, etc.) - They are the fundamental aspect of visual
sensation (because they are independent of any
interpretation or categorization of objects) - Sensorimotor contingencies determined by the
visual attributes of the object, or geometric
invariants (characteristics of the object that
doesnt change when the eye moves) - They are the basis of visual perception
6Visual sensorimotor contingencies visual percepts
- Movements of the eyes
- When the eyes rotate, the sensory stimulation of
the retina shifts and distorts in a very
particular way, determined by the size of the eye
movement, the shape of the retina, the nature of
the ocular optics contours shift and the
curvature of the lines changes, the distribution
of information on the retin changes (because of
the difference of distribution of photoreceptors
in central and perripheral vision) - When the body moves forwards, the flow pattern on
the retina is an expanding one when moving
backwards a contracting one - When the eyes close during blinks, the
stimulation changes drastically becoming uniform - Constraints of visual-type exploration/visual
attributes of objects - The retinal image of an object only provides a
frontal view of the object - When one moves around the object parts of the
object appear and disappear - We can only apprehend an object from a definite
distance (retinal projection depends on distance) - Color and brightness of the objects change when
one moves around the object or lighting
conditions change
7Perception of visual shape
- Exemple Patiens born blind and operated
- A patient cited by Helmholtz is surprised that a
coin should so dramatically change its shape when
rotated - A patient of Cheseldon was surprised by the
change in extent of an object in fonction of the
distance - The visual quality of shape is precisely the
set of all potential distortions that the shape
undergoes when it is moved relative to us, or
when we move relative to it. - Although it is an infinite set, the brain can
abstract from this set a series of laws, and it
is this set of laws which codes shape
8Other sensorimotor contingecies auditory percepts
- Auditory sensorimotor contingencies are not
affected by eye movements or blinks, but they are
affected in a special way by head movements - rotations of the head change the temporal
asynchrony between the ears - movements of the head in the direction of the
sound source affect the amplitude but not the
frequency of the input - Tactile exploration of an object obeys different
sensorimotor contingencies - One doesnt touch an object from a point of view
- The tactile aspect of an object doesnt change
with lighting conditions
9Knowledge of sensorimotor laws
- Summary what differentiate the senses are not
the neural pathways but the laws obeyed by the
sensorimotor contingencies associates with these
senses - Sensorimotor contingencies are distinctive for
each sensory modality - The laws of sensorimotor contingency are
determined by the fact that the exploration is
being made by a particular apparatus and
exercised on specific characters of the object - The brain distinguishes between the senses on the
basis of the different sensorimotor laws a
percept respond to - Two conditions must be achieved to perceive in a
certain modality - Presence of the conditions for the two kind of
sensorimotor contingency laws - Active master of the laws
- Third condition for visual (sensory) awareness
- The master of the laws must be comprised in
plannings, thougs, linguistic behavior
10A practical form of knowledge
- The mastery of the rules of sensorimotor
contingency is not something we possess a
propositional knowledge about - We are not able to describe in detail how it is
distorted a seen surface when we rotate the eyes - The deviation from the laws that our brain
normally extract causes an impression that
something unusual is happening and let us see the
distortions - When we put on a new pair of glasses we see
distortions for a while because the movement of
the eyes provokes displacements of unusual
amplitude - The knowledge of the laws is a predictive or
anticipatory knowledge Perceptual experience
is a mode of activity involving practical
knowledge about currently possible behaviors and
associated sensory consequences - When one sees or touch a bottle there is a
knowledge in his nervous system about what he
would feel or see if he move his hands or eyes
upwards or downwards the bottle, and it is this
anticipation that tells him that he is touching a
bottle and not a pitcher
11Some phenomena explained within sensorimotor
contingency approach
- Tactile visual sensory substitution
- In experiences with TVSS it is only when the
observer is allowed to move the videocamera that
identification becomes possible and that that he
begins to see something as externally
localized, in the space before him (also if the
stimulus array is on his back) - If an experience in one sensory modality derives
from the rules that govern action-related
changes in sensory input visual experience
could be obtainable by other sensory channels
when the brain extracts the same invariants in
the structure of the senorimotor contingencies - So subjects with TVSS see and not just see
the fact that the stimulus is provided by the
skin is irrelevant, provided that the stimulation
obeyes the required sensorimotor laws (of course
the laws are not exactly the same as seeing with
the eyes, as seeing in the dark is not the same
thing that seein with full light)
12Multimodal interactions
- Synesthesia and other multimodal substitutions
and interactions as ventriloquism effect, McGurk
effect and others - The experience associated with a modality exists
only within the context of other senses available
to the organism senses are not really separated - Although sensory modalities have their own
specificities dues to the particularities of
sensors and of sensorimotor contingencies, when
there are systematic correlations and common
sensorimotor contingencies, interactions between
the senses are to be expected - Anyway, the mentioned specificities define the
particular experience associated with each sense
13Binding problem
- The binding problem is a pseudo problem
- Neuroanatomists believe that the visual system is
composed of numerous sub-systems or modules which
are independent and often localized in different
parts of the brain so they raise the question of
where and how the different features ultimately
come together to produce a unified perception of
reality as we experience they suggest some
solutions - The grand-mother cell in which single cells at
least combine information - The synchronized oscillation of the separate
cortical areas which are analysing different
components of the information - The binding problem can be analysed under two
issues - Temporal unit or coherence
- scientists think that, because we have the
impression that we see simultaneously all the
attributes when we identify an object, then the
information about these attributes must be bound
together synchronously. - It is a fallacy physical synchrony is not
necessary for having a synchronous experience
because it is not the internal representation
which counts for the coherence of the experience.
What counts for a temporally coherent
experience is the fact is a thing we are doing,
and we are doing it now - Conceptual unit or coherence
- The fact that object attributes seem to be part
of a single object doesnt require them to be
represented in a unified way, for example at
a single location of the brain, or by a single
process and if they are represented in a
spatially or temporally way this doesnt explain
the perceptual coherence. What explains the
conceptual unity of experience is the fact that
experience is a thing we are doing and we are
doing it with respect to a conceptually unified
external world
14Qualia
- Qualia doesnexist the differences in the
qualitative character of perceptual experiences
correspond to differences in the character of the
relevant sensorimotor contingencies - The difference between driving a Porche and
driving a tank is in the different things we do
driving them, in the different practical
knowledge about driving them - The difference between seein and smelling a red
flower consists in the different patterns of
sensorimotor contingencies that governs
perceptual encounte with each - To experience the redness of an object or to feel
to drive a Porche is to know what would happen if
the light changes or if the accelerator is
pressed down
15Some problems with multimodality and
intermodality is a sensorimotor account complete?
- The fact that the laws of sensorimotor
contingency are different from a modality to
another, doesnt indicate the necessity of a kind
of binding, even if not an internal binding, but
a description of the way in which different
sensorimotor contingencies become an object
instead of two objects? - Supposed that we accept there is no need of
binding, what about the need for coherence could
a system act in a world that is not coherent?
Dont we need mechanism to warranty coherence?
These mechanisms could act on information or on
sensorimotor contingencies, in order to set an
accord between contingencies? - Are there laws that rule multisensory
contingency ? Are these rules effective on
perception? ie regarding the relation between
vision and touch in prehension complex rules for
a motor act that define a sort of sensorimotor
act? - In tactile visual substitution, ie, how can we
say that the laws of sensorimotor contingency are
analogous with eyes or tactile substitution?
Performances are they better if the device is
placed on the front of the subject instead of on
the back (in order to move the camera as he moves
his head)? Visibly, not