Predicting instabilities: an embodied perspective on unstable experiences with art and design

Abstract

Predictive Processing (PP) provides a theoretical framework that describes perception as a process attempting to increase the predictability of stimulations by updating predictions or exploring new sensations. Moreover, perception and action are assumed to be closely linked within this process. While organisms seem to strive for predictability, we sometimes expose ourselves to objects and situations that challenge sense-making—such conditions often break perceptual habits or offer multiple possible meanings. This paper updates a previous qualification of these experiences of ‘Semantic Instability’ (SeIns) by following an embodied and situated understanding of perception and cognition. We suggest that art perception essentially differs from problem-solving as in engaging with art, we typically integrate contradictory elements dynamically and without the ultimate goal of resolving the contradictions—on the contrary, SeIns itself can generate aesthetic hedonics and interest. We discuss how current embodied accounts of PP might help understand what motivates such unstable yet insightful and pleasurable nonlinear sense-making processes.

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Titel Predicting instabilities: an embodied perspective on unstable experiences with art and design
Medien Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
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Heft 1895
Band 379
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Verfasser/Herausgeber Dr. habil. Claudia Muth, Claus-Christian Carbon
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Veröffentlichungsdatum 2023-12-18
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Zitation Muth, Claudia; Carbon, Claus-Christian (2023): Predicting instabilities: an embodied perspective on unstable experiences with art and design. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 379, 20220416 (1895). DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0416