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      Recommendations for Good Scientific Practice and the Consumers of VR-Technology

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      Frontiers in Robotics and AI
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          The Dark Triad of personality: Narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy

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            Interoceptive inference, emotion, and the embodied self.

            The concept of the brain as a prediction machine has enjoyed a resurgence in the context of the Bayesian brain and predictive coding approaches within cognitive science. To date, this perspective has been applied primarily to exteroceptive perception (e.g., vision, audition), and action. Here, I describe a predictive, inferential perspective on interoception: 'interoceptive inference' conceives of subjective feeling states (emotions) as arising from actively-inferred generative (predictive) models of the causes of interoceptive afferents. The model generalizes 'appraisal' theories that view emotions as emerging from cognitive evaluations of physiological changes, and it sheds new light on the neurocognitive mechanisms that underlie the experience of body ownership and conscious selfhood in health and in neuropsychiatric illness. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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              The Proteus Effect: The Effect of Transformed Self-Representation on Behavior

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Frontiers in Robotics and AI
                Front. Robot. AI
                Frontiers Media SA
                2296-9144
                February 19 2016
                February 19 2016
                : 3
                :
                Article
                10.3389/frobt.2016.00003
                48fdd48e-7d58-4c55-8bba-09def4c5e92b
                © 2016
                History

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