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Title: Sensory Augmentation, Synthetic Phenomenology and Interactive Empiricism


1
Sensory Augmentation,Synthetic Phenomenology
andInteractive Empiricism
Ron Chrisley Centre for Research in Cognitive
Science Department of Informatics University of
Sussex, Brighton, UK
  • Workshop on Key Issues in Sensory Augmentation
  • University of Sussex
  • 26th-27th March 2009

2
Overview
  • Sensory Augmentation as Prosthetic Artificial
    Consciousness
  • Foundational issues
  • Why it matters (to me)
  • Science Synthetic phenomenology
  • Philosophy Interactive empiricism

3
Part 1
  • Sensory Augmentation as Prosthetic Artificial
    Consciousness

4
Artificial Consciousness
  • The attempt to build artefacts that have, or help
    us understand, consciousness
  • Sometimes referred to as machine consciousness
  • Epistemological problem Gap between
    third-person engineering and first-person
    consciousness
  • How is the approach supposed to work?
  • How to measure progress?
  • How can one know if one has succeeded?

5
Autonomous vs. ProstheticArtificial
Consciousness (AC)
  • Proposal AC community should stop focussing
    exclusively on autonomous AC
  • Prosthetic AC creates new experiences by altering
    or extending the agent-based processes that
    enable them
  • E.g., (Chrisley 2008) AC might contribute to
    our understanding of consciousness as much by
    systematically altering or extending it as by
    replicating it.

6
Sensory Augmentation asProsthetic Artificial
Consciousness
  • Sensory augmentation designers You are engaging
    in Prosthetic AC!
  • So you have a lot to contribute to, and benefit
    from, other research into the nature of
    consciousness
  • A call for collaboration

7
Part 2
  • Foundational issues

8
What is sensory augmentation?
  • Prior questions What is a sense modality? What
    is perception?
  • Not having an answer can lead to some problematic
    views
  • E.g. Millikan Language as a form of direct
    perception
  • What is wrong with this picture?
  • Proposal Perception requires a particular
    relation between conceptual and non-conceptual
    content

9
Andy Clark on sensory modalities
  • Qualia-based view is that there is a principled
    distinction between sensory modalities
  • We should resist the temptation of this view, and
    instead adopt a solely content-based view of
    perception
  • Thus, distinction between modalities is only a
    matter of degree

10
Sensory modalities Rejecting the dichotomy
  • Can do justice to the intuition that there is a
    principled, qualitative distinction between
    sensory modalities
  • Without having to embrace the problematic notion
    of qualia
  • Instead There are principled, qualitative
    distinctions between the contents delivered by
    perception
  • One idea imaginative/epistemic closure

11
Sensory modalities as contents closed under
imagination
  • A set S of contents are in the same modality if
    and only if, for all contents c in S, knowing,
    for all d in S ?c, what it would be like to have
    experiences with the contents d, implies
    knowledge of what it would be like to have an
    experience with content c
  • A first pass, so probably not correct
  • But an example of what needs to be done
  • Why?

12
Part 3
  • Why it matters (to me)

13
a) Sensory augmentation science
  • In particular, a science of consciousness
  • Need non-linguistic ways for scientists to
    specify particular conscious experiences
    (Chrisley 1995)
  • That is, need to develop means of specification
    that exploit the (non-conceptual contents of) the
    scientists experiences

14
Synthetic Phenomenology
  • Synthetic phenomenology using artefacts to to
    specify conscious experiences (Chrisley 2009)
  • Given enactive nature of experience, artefacts
    will have to be enactive (e.g., robots Chrisley
    Parthemore 2007)

15
Synthetic Phenomenology and sensory augmentation
  • Problem the range of experience any given
    scientist may have is a subjective matter,
    whereas science aims at objectivity
  • Sensory augmentation and substitution can allow
    this limitation to be overcome

16
b) Sensory augmentation philosophy
  • Philosophy provides methods for conceptual
    analysis and development
  • (Focus in this lecture is on the method of
    analytic philosophy, or at least what it is
    conventionally believed to be)

17
Analysis is propositional
  • Problem solving within the analytic method is
    (taken to be) exclusively propositional
  • Assumes a static stock C of basic concepts
  • Emphasis on creation of new propositions out of C
  • If new concepts are proposed, these are logical
    combinations of concepts in C

18
The limits ofpropositional analysis
  • Solving some conceptual problems requires
    concepts not in C, nor equal to some logical
    combination of concepts in C
  • If so, then solution of these problems requires
    methods not currently taken to be part of
    analytic philosophy

19
The limits ofpropositional analysis
  • E.g., the mind/body problem can't be solved with
    only our current concepts of mental and physical
  • "We may hope and ought to try as part of a
    scientific theory of mind to form a third
    conception that does directly entail both the
    mental and the physical, and through which their
    actual necessary connection with one another can
    therefore become transparent to us. Such a
    conception will have to be created we wont just
    find it lying around." (Nagel 1998)

20
Extending the analytic method
  • This is not to say that the required new methods
    are not philosophical
  • Since these methods will have the function of
    providing the right concepts for resolving
    philosophical, conceptual problems, it is right
    to see them as philosophical
  • Rather, the current view of the method of
    analytical philosophy, either as it is, or as it
    could be, is incomplete

21
Beyond concept empiricismInteractive Empiricism
  • Concept empiricism
  • The acquisition of (some) concepts requires
    having (certain kinds of) experience
  • Interactive empiricism
  • Concept empiricism, plus
  • The acknowledgement that the required experiences
    are typically interactive
  • The experiences are not just sets of input, but
    a dynamic coupling between action and perception.
    (cf Held and Hein)

22
Concept acquisition asnon-propositional activity
  • Concepts are skills, and and at least some skills
    cannot be acquired propositionally, in the sense
    above
  • (E.g., Cant learn to ride a bicycle solely by
    reading about it.)

23
A role for engineering and design in philosophy
  • Cf first two sentences of (Sloman and Chrisley
    2003)
  • Replication or even modelling of consciousness
    in machines requires some clarifications and
    refinements of our concept of consciousness.
    Design of, construction of, and interaction with
    artificial systems can itself assist in this
    conceptual development.
  • Had autonomous AC in mind, but can also involve
    prosthetic AC The enactive torch (Froese and
    Spiers 2007 Chrisley, Froese Spiers 2008)

24
Three ways to engineer for conceptual change
  • Design loop Design and build artefacts that do
    X so that the experience of designing itself
    produces new concepts of X (et al)
  • Use loop 1 Design and build artefacts the use of
    which produce new experiences of Y, that in turn
    prompt new concepts of Y
  • Use loop 2 Design and build artefacts the use of
    which produce new experiences of Y, that in turn
    prompt new concepts of experience itself (Z)

25
The enactive torch andconcepts of perception
  • Conceptual problems in the philosophy of
    perception
  • E.g. "Is perception independent of action?"
  • Traditionally Yes
  • Enactive theories of perception No
  • Latter can be hard to grasp, understand, or
    motivate
  • Experience of using (or designing!) the enactive
    torch may assist this conceptual shift

26
Engineering conceptual changeToward an
empirical study
  • Proposal Empirically measure the extent to which
    experience with a sensory substitution device can
    change ones concepts of perception
  • Method Ask subjects to indicate their degree of
    assent to statements about perception and action
    before and after use of enactive torch
  • Controls use of normal torch (and reading
    philosophy texts about perception?)
  • Similar to experimental philosophy, but emphasis
    on conceptual change, and engineering

27
Empirical studies of conceptual change New
methodology
  • Problem How to measure changes in concepts?
  • Cant just ask Linguistically expressible
    changes in concepts indicate propositional
    conceptual change
  • Instead, observe behaviour with respect to the
    domain changes in reaction time, or degrees of
    assent/confidence

28
References
  • Chrisley, R. (2009a, in press). "Interactive
    empiricism the philosopher in the machine, in
    McCarthy, N. (ed.), Philosophy of Engineering
    Proceedings of a Series of Seminars held at The
    Royal Academy of Engineering. London Royal
    Academy of Engineering. http//www.cogs.susx.ac.uk
    /users/ronc/papers/interactive-empiricism.pdf
  • Chrisley, R. (2009b, in press) "Synthetic
    Phenomenology", International Journal of Machine
    Consciousness 11. http//www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/user
    s/ronc/papers/synthetic-phenomenology-ijmc.pdf
  • Chrisley, R. (2009c, in preparation) "Synthetic
    phenomenology". Scholarpedia. http//www.scholarpe
    dia.org/article/Synthetic_phenomenology.
  • Chrisley, R. (2008) "Philosophical foundations of
    artificial consciousness". Artificial
    Intelligence In Medicine 44119-137.
    doi10.1016/j.artmed.2008.07.011
    http//www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/users/ronc/papers/phil-
    founds-artificial-consciousness.pdf
  • Chrisley, R. Froese, T., Spiers, A (2008)
    "Engineering conceptual change The Enactive
    Torch" Abstract of talk given November 11th,
    2008, at the Royal Academy of Engineering as part
    of the 2008 Workshop on Philosophy and
    Engineering http//www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/users/ronc/
    e-asterisk/WPE2008-Chrisley.pdf
  • Chrisley, R. and Parthemore, J. (2007a) "Robotic
    specification of the non-conceptual content of
    visual experience". In Proceedings of the AAAI
    Fall Symposium on "Consciousness and Artificial
    Intelligence Theoretical foundations and current
    approaches". AAAI Press. http//www.consciousness.
    it/CAI/online_papers/Chrisley.pdf
  • Chrisley, R. and Parthemore, J. (2007b)
    "Synthetic phenomenology Exploiting embodiment
    to specify the non-conceptual content of visual
    experience". Journal of Consciousness Studies 14
    pp. 44-58. http//www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/users/ronc/p
    apers/ChrisleyandParthemore-SyntheticPhenomenology
    .pdf
  • Chrisley, R. (1995) "Taking Embodiment Seriously
    Non-conceptual Content and Robotics," in Ford,
    K., Glymour, C. and Hayes, P. (eds.) Android
    Epistemology. Cambridge AAAI/MIT Press, pp
    141-166. http//www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/users/ronc/pap
    ers/ae-embodiment.pdf
  • Froese, T. Spiers, A. (2007). Toward a
    Phenomenological Pragmatics of Enactive
    Perception, in Proc. of the 4th Int. Conf. on
    Enactive Interfaces, Grenoble, France
    Association ACROE, pp. 105-108.

29
Thank You
  • More information on the enactive torch is
    available at http//enactivetorch.wordpress.com
  • See also the multimedia files available at
    http//e-asterisk.blogspot.com
  • Comments welcome
  • ronc_at_sussex.ac.uk
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