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When one is immersed in the fascinating world of neuroscience findings, the brain might start to seem like a collection of "modules," each specializes in a specific mental feat. But just like in other domains of Nature, it is possible that much of the brain and mind's operation can be explained with a small set of universal principles. Given exciting recent developments in theory, empirical findings and computational studies, it seems that the generation of predictions might be one strong candidate for such a universal principle. This is the focus of Predictions in the brain. From the predictions required when a rat navigates a maze to food-caching in scrub-jays; from predictions essential in decision-making to social interactions; from predictions in the retina to the prefrontal cortex; and from predictions in early development to foresight in non-humans.
The perspectives represented in this collection span a spectrum from the cellular underpinnings to the computational principles underlying future-related mental processes, and from systems neuroscience to cognition and emotion. In spite of this diversity, they share some core elements. Memory, for instance, is critical in any framework that explains predictions. In asking "what is next?" our brains have to refer to memory and experience on the way to simulating our mental future.
But as much as this collection offers answers to important questions, it raises and emphasizes outstanding ones. How are experiences coded optimally to afford using them for predictions? How do we construct a new simulation from separate memories? How specific in detail are future-oriented thoughts, and when do they rely on imagery, concepts or language? Therefore, in addition to presenting the state-of-the-art of research and ideas about predictions as a universal principle in mind and brain, it is hoped that this collection will stimulate important new research into the foundations of our mental lives.
Moshe Bar, Ph.D, is the Director of the Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory at the Harvard Medical School and the Massachusetts General Hospital. He has been using methods from cognitive psychology, psychophysics, computational neuroscience, psychiatry and human brain imaging to explore issues concerning human vision, context and predictions.
(Preface) Predictions: A universal principle in the operation of the human brainMoshe Bar
1. Varieties of Future ExperienceKarl K. Szpunar , and Endel Tulving
2. The proactive brainMoshe Bar
3. Simulation, Situated Conceptualization, and PredictionsLawrence W. Barsalou
4. The Prefrontal Cortex and the Construction of Mental Models for Future ThinkingAron K. Barbey, Frank Krueger, and Jordan Grafman.5. On the nature of medial temporal lobe contributions to the constructive simulation of future events Daniel Schacter and Donna Rose Addis
6. The construction system of the brainDemis Hassabis and Eleanor A. Maguire
7. Similarities in Episodic Future Thought and Remembering: The Importance of Contextual SettingKathleen McDermott, Karl K. Szpunar , and Kathleen M. Arnold
8. Imagining Predictions: Mental Imagery as Mental EmulationSamuel T. Moulton and Stephen M. Kosslyn
9. See It with Feeling: Affective Predictions During Object PerceptionspLisa Feldman Barrett and Moshe Bar
10. The somatic marker hypothesis and its neural basis: Using past experiences to forecast the future in decision-makingAntoine Bechara
11. Envisioning the Future and Self-RegulationShelley E. Taylor
12. Prediction: A Construal Level Theory PerspectiveNira Liberman, Yaacov Trope, and So Yon Rim
13. Previews, Premotions, and PredictionsDaniel Gilbert and Timothy D. Wilson
14. On look-ahead in language: navigating a multitude of familiar pathsShimon Edelman
15. A look around at what's ahead: Prediction and predictability in language processingMarta Kutas, Katherine A. DeLong, and Nathaniel J. Smith
16. Cortical and Subcortical Predictive Dynamics and Learning during Perception, Cognition, Emotion, and ActionStephen Grossberg
17. Predictive coding: A free-energy formulationKarl Friston and Stefan Kiebel
18. Sequence Memory for Prediction, Inference, and BehaviorJeff Hawkins, Dileep George, and Jamie Niemasik
19. Prediction, sequences and the hippocampusJohn Lisman and A. David Redish
20. The neurobiology of memory based predictionsHoward Eichenbaum and Norbert J. Fortin
21. Predicting not to predict too much: How the cellular machinery of memory anticipates the uncertain futureYadin Dudai
22. The Retina As Embodying Predictions About the Visual WorldMichael J. Berry II and Gregory Schwartz
23. Making Predictions: A Developmental Perspective Cristina Atance and Laura K. Hanson
24. Prospective Decision Making in Animals: A Potential Role for Intertemporal Choice in the study of Prospective CognitionLucy G Cheke, James M Thom and Nicola S Clayton
25. Mental Time Travel and the Shaping of the Human MindThomas Suddendorf