The synthetic psychology of the self

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Abstract

Synthetic psychology describes the approach of “understanding through building” applied to the human condition. In this chapter, we consider the specific challenge of synthesizing a robot “sense of self”. Our starting hypothesis is that the human self is brought into being by the activity of a set of transient self-processes instantiated by the brain and body. We propose that we can synthesize a robot self by developing equivalent sub-systems within an integrated biomimetic cognitive architecture for a humanoid robot. We begin the chapter by motivating this work in the context of the criteria for recognizing other minds, and the challenge of benchmarking artificial intelligence against human, and conclude by describing efforts to create a sense of self for the iCub humanoid robot that has ecological, temporally-extended, interpersonal and narrative components set within a multi-layered model of mind.

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Prescott, T. J., & Camilleri, D. (2019). The synthetic psychology of the self. In Intelligent Systems, Control and Automation: Science and Engineering (Vol. 94, pp. 85–104). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-97550-4_7

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