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What is a sensorimotor connection in plain English?
Practical Use For a NeuroimagerOCD Motivation and Dopamine Motivation, is there a connection?Number of presynaptic inputs per cell in primary visual cortexIs meaning-seeking behavior a biological optimization problem?Parasite that takes over cognitive functionsWhat is forward maskingHow does the brain generate answers to questions?How addictive is Heroine?Will studying formal logic improves logical reasoning?What sources of randomness does the brain use for sampling?
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I have googled, but haven't found any definition simple enough that I understand. I would appreciate it if you could give me an example as well!
Thanks,
Jack
neuroscience sensation reinforcement-learning
New contributor
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add a comment |
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I have googled, but haven't found any definition simple enough that I understand. I would appreciate it if you could give me an example as well!
Thanks,
Jack
neuroscience sensation reinforcement-learning
New contributor
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I have googled, but haven't found any definition simple enough that I understand. I would appreciate it if you could give me an example as well!
Thanks,
Jack
neuroscience sensation reinforcement-learning
New contributor
$endgroup$
I have googled, but haven't found any definition simple enough that I understand. I would appreciate it if you could give me an example as well!
Thanks,
Jack
neuroscience sensation reinforcement-learning
neuroscience sensation reinforcement-learning
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked Jun 15 at 8:20
JackJack
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The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines the word sensorimotor to be:
of, relating to, or functioning in both sensory and motor aspects of bodily activity
and the following relating to the tags you used may help to understand the word.
The idea that we learn by interacting with our environment is probably the first to occur to us when we think about the nature of learning. When an infant plays, waves its arms, or looks about, it has no explicit teacher, but it does have a direct sensorimotor connection to its environment (Sutton & Barto, 2005)
As Merriam Webster points out, the sensorimotor connections are related to sensation and to motion
Dictionary.com points out that physiologically, they relate to
both sensory and motor, as parts of the cerebral cortex.
The sensorimotor connection to your environment taught you what an object looks, feels, smells and sounds like and helps with your spacial awareness.
References
Sutton, R. S. & Barto, A. G. (2005). Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
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$begingroup$
The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines the word sensorimotor to be:
of, relating to, or functioning in both sensory and motor aspects of bodily activity
and the following relating to the tags you used may help to understand the word.
The idea that we learn by interacting with our environment is probably the first to occur to us when we think about the nature of learning. When an infant plays, waves its arms, or looks about, it has no explicit teacher, but it does have a direct sensorimotor connection to its environment (Sutton & Barto, 2005)
As Merriam Webster points out, the sensorimotor connections are related to sensation and to motion
Dictionary.com points out that physiologically, they relate to
both sensory and motor, as parts of the cerebral cortex.
The sensorimotor connection to your environment taught you what an object looks, feels, smells and sounds like and helps with your spacial awareness.
References
Sutton, R. S. & Barto, A. G. (2005). Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines the word sensorimotor to be:
of, relating to, or functioning in both sensory and motor aspects of bodily activity
and the following relating to the tags you used may help to understand the word.
The idea that we learn by interacting with our environment is probably the first to occur to us when we think about the nature of learning. When an infant plays, waves its arms, or looks about, it has no explicit teacher, but it does have a direct sensorimotor connection to its environment (Sutton & Barto, 2005)
As Merriam Webster points out, the sensorimotor connections are related to sensation and to motion
Dictionary.com points out that physiologically, they relate to
both sensory and motor, as parts of the cerebral cortex.
The sensorimotor connection to your environment taught you what an object looks, feels, smells and sounds like and helps with your spacial awareness.
References
Sutton, R. S. & Barto, A. G. (2005). Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines the word sensorimotor to be:
of, relating to, or functioning in both sensory and motor aspects of bodily activity
and the following relating to the tags you used may help to understand the word.
The idea that we learn by interacting with our environment is probably the first to occur to us when we think about the nature of learning. When an infant plays, waves its arms, or looks about, it has no explicit teacher, but it does have a direct sensorimotor connection to its environment (Sutton & Barto, 2005)
As Merriam Webster points out, the sensorimotor connections are related to sensation and to motion
Dictionary.com points out that physiologically, they relate to
both sensory and motor, as parts of the cerebral cortex.
The sensorimotor connection to your environment taught you what an object looks, feels, smells and sounds like and helps with your spacial awareness.
References
Sutton, R. S. & Barto, A. G. (2005). Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
$endgroup$
The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines the word sensorimotor to be:
of, relating to, or functioning in both sensory and motor aspects of bodily activity
and the following relating to the tags you used may help to understand the word.
The idea that we learn by interacting with our environment is probably the first to occur to us when we think about the nature of learning. When an infant plays, waves its arms, or looks about, it has no explicit teacher, but it does have a direct sensorimotor connection to its environment (Sutton & Barto, 2005)
As Merriam Webster points out, the sensorimotor connections are related to sensation and to motion
Dictionary.com points out that physiologically, they relate to
both sensory and motor, as parts of the cerebral cortex.
The sensorimotor connection to your environment taught you what an object looks, feels, smells and sounds like and helps with your spacial awareness.
References
Sutton, R. S. & Barto, A. G. (2005). Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
answered Jun 15 at 10:33
Chris RogersChris Rogers
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Jack is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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