Relations (1)
related 2.81 — strongly supporting 6 facts
Perception and action are fundamentally linked as core components of AI agent architecture [1] and integrated cognitive systems [2], [3], [4]. Furthermore, evolutionary psychology posits that the primary function of perception is to guide action [5], a relationship that researchers empirically distinguish through experimental neural activity analysis [6].
Facts (6)
Sources
The Synergy of Symbolic and Connectionist AI in LLM ... arxiv.org 1 fact
claimLarge Language Models are trained on large-scale transformers comprising billions of learnable parameters to support abilities including perception, reasoning, planning, and action.
Evolutionary psychology - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org 1 fact
perspectiveEvolutionary psychologists argue that the primary purpose of perception is to guide action, contrasting with the view held by experts like Jerry Fodor that the purpose of perception is to provide knowledge.
KG-RAG: Bridging the Gap Between Knowledge and Creativity - arXiv arxiv.org 1 fact
claimAn AI agent is composed of three core components: perception, brain, and action.
Global Workspace vs. Integrated Information: Testing… templetonworldcharity.org 1 fact
procedureThe experimental design for macaques involves three conditions: a target visual stimulus requiring a response, a non-target face not requiring a response, and an irrelevant visual stimulus, which allows researchers to distinguish between neural activity related to perception versus action.
The Synergy of Symbolic and Connectionist AI in LLM-Empowered ... arxiv.org 1 fact
claimLarge Language Models (LLMs) are trained on large-scale transformers comprising billions of learnable parameters to support agent abilities such as perception, reasoning, planning, and action.
The Mechanisms of Psychedelic Visionary Experiences - Frontiers frontiersin.org 1 fact
claimThe common system for understanding both verbal and visual events relies on a distributed network that integrates perception, action, and conceptual processing.