As we have emphasized in previous chapters, particularly in Chaps. 4 and 6, the FEP is a formal, completely general, scale-free framework for describing interactions between physical systems in cognitive terms. It states that any system S that interacts with its environment E weakly enough to maintain its identifiability over time possesses an MB that separates its, S’s, internal states from the internal states of E, and that any such S asymptotically minimizes the VFE measured at its MB by using its GM to generate probabilistic beliefs about the consequences of actions.

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Active Inference and Self-organizing Systems

  • Chris Fields,
  • James Glazebrook

摘要

As we have emphasized in previous chapters, particularly in Chaps. 4 and 6, the FEP is a formal, completely general, scale-free framework for describing interactions between physical systems in cognitive terms. It states that any system S that interacts with its environment E weakly enough to maintain its identifiability over time possesses an MB that separates its, S’s, internal states from the internal states of E, and that any such S asymptotically minimizes the VFE measured at its MB by using its GM to generate probabilistic beliefs about the consequences of actions.