Modeling the subjective perspective of consciousness and its role in the control of behaviours
D. Rudrauf, G. Sergeant-Perthuis, O. Belli, Y. Tisserand, G. Di Marzo Serugendo

TL;DR
This paper introduces a model of consciousness's subjective perspective using the Projective Consciousness Model, demonstrating how it influences behavior, social cognition, and psychological phenomena through simulations of artificial agents and robots.
Contribution
It operationalizes the subjective perspective of consciousness with a geometrical model, linking it to behavior, social cognition, and clinical psychology through simulations.
Findings
Model accounts for appraisal and distance relationships.
Generates affective and epistemic drives based on subjective parameters.
Simulations show emergence of social and maladaptive behaviors.
Abstract
Consciousness has been hypothesized to operate as a global workspace, which accesses and integrates multimodal information in a unified manner, supports expectation violation monitoring and reduction, and the motivation, programming and control of action. One important yet open issue concerns how the subjective perspective at the core of consciousness, and subjective properties of manifestation of the environment in such perspective as an embodied experience, plays a role in such process. We operationalised the concept of subjective perspective using the principles of the Projective Consciousness Model (PCM), based on the projective geometrical concept of Field of Consciousness. We show how these principles can account for documented relationships between appraisal and distance as an inverse distance law, yield a generative model of affective and epistemic drives based on purely…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmbodied and Extended Cognition · Action Observation and Synchronization · Child and Animal Learning Development
