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How your brain hallucinates your conscious reality

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    Just over a year ago,
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    for the third time in my life,
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    I seized to exist.
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    I was having a small operation,
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    and my brain was filling with anesthetic.
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    I remember a sense of detachment
    and falling apart
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    and a coldness.
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    And then I was back,
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    drowsy and disoriented,
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    but definitely there.
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    When you wake from a deep sleep,
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    you might feel confused about the time
    or anxious about oversleeping,
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    but there's always a basic sense
    of time having passed,
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    of a continuity between then and now.
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    Coming out from
    anesthesia is very different.
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    I could have been under for five minute,
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    five hours,
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    five years,
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    or even 50 years.
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    I simply wasn't there.
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    It was total obliviion.
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    Anesthesia --
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    it's a modern kind of magic.
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    It turns people into objects --
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    and then we hope --
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    back again into people.
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    And in this process
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    is one of the greatest remaining
    mysteries in science and philosophy.
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    How does consciousness happen?
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    Somehow, within each or our brains,
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    the combined activity
    of many billions of neurons,
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    each one a tiny biological machine,
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    is generating a conscious experience.
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    And not just any conscious experience --
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    your conscious experience
    right here and right now.
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    How does this happen?
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    Answering this question is so important
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    because consciousness
    for each of us is all there is.
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    Without it, there's no world,
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    there's no self,
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    there's nothing at all.
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    And when we suffer,
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    we suffer conciously,
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    whether it's through mental
    illness or pain.
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    And if we can experience
    joy and suffering,
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    what about other animals?
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    Might they be conscious, too?
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    Do they also have a sense of self?
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    And as computers get faster and smarter,
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    maybe there will come a point,
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    maybe not too far away,
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    when my iPhone develops a sense
    of its own existence.
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    I actually think the prospects
    for a conscious AI are pretty remote.
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    And I think this because
    my research is telling me
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    that consciousness has less to do
    with pure intelligence
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    and more to do with our nature
    as living and breathing organisms.
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    Consciousness and intelligence
    are very different things.
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    You don't have to be smart to suffer,
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    but you probably do have to be alive.
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    In the story I'm going to tell you,
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    our conscious experiences
    of the world around us,
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    and of ourselves within it,
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    are kinds of controlled hallucinations
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    that happen with, through
    and because of our living bodies.
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    Now, you might have heard
    that we know nothing
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    about how the brain and body
    give rise to consciousness.
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    Some people even say it's beyond
    the reach of science all together.
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    But in fact,
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    the last 25 years have seen an explosion
    of scientific work in this area.
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    If you come to my lab
    at the University of Sussex,
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    you'll find scientists
    from all different disciplines,
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    and sometimes even philosophers.
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    All of us together trying to understand
    how conscioussness happens
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    and what happens when it goes wrong.
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    The strategy is very simple.
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    I'd like you to think about consciousness
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    in the way that we've
    come to think about life.
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    At one time,
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    people thought the property
    of being alive could not be explained
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    by physics and chemisty.
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    That life had to be more
    than just mechanism.
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    But people no longer think that.
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    As biologists got on with the job
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    of explaining the properties
    of living systems
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    in terms of physics and chemistry --
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    things like metabolism, reproduction,
    homeostasis --
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    the basic mystery of what life is
    started to fade away,
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    and people didn't propose any more
    magical solutions,
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    like a force of life or an élan vital.
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    So as with life,
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    so with consciousness.
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    Once we start explaining its properties
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    in terms of things happening
    inside brains and bodies,
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    the apparently insoluble mystery
    of what consciousness is
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    should start to fade away.
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    At least that's the plan.
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    So let's get started.
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    What are the properties of consciousness?
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    What should a science
    of consciousness try to explain?
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    Well, for today I'd just like to think
    of consciousness in two different ways.
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    There are experiences
    of the world around us,
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    full of sights, sounds and smells,
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    there's multisensory, panoramic,
    3D, fully immersive inner movie.
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    And then there's conscious self.
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    The specific experience
    of being you or being me.
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    The lead character in this inner movie,
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    and probably the aspect of consciousness
    we all cling to most tightly.
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    Let's start with experiences
    of the world around us
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    with the important idea of the brain
    as a prediction engine.
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    Imagine being a brain.
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    You're locked inside a bony skull,
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    trying to figure out what's
    out there in the world.
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    There's no lights inside the skull.
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    There's no sound either.
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    All you've got to go on is streams
    of electrical impulses
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    which are only indirectly related
    to things in the world,
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    whatever they may be.
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    So perception --
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    figuring out what's there --
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    has to be a process of informed guess work
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    in which the brain combines
    these sensory signals,
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    with its prior expectations or beliefs
    about the way the world is
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    to form its best guess of what
    caused those signals.
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    The brain doesn't hear sound or see light.
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    What we perceive is its best guess
    of what's out there in the world.
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    Let me give you a couple
    of examples of all this.
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    You might have seen this illusion before,
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    but I'd like you to think
    about it in a new way.
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    If you look at those two patches, A and B,
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    they should look to you to be
    very different shades of gray, right?
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    But they are in fact
    exactly the same shade.
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    And I can illustrate this.
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    If I put up a second version
    of the image here,
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    and join the two patches
    with a gray-colored bar,
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    and you can see there's no difference.
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    It's exactly the same shade of gray.
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    And if you still don't believe me,
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    I'll bring the bar across
    and joing them up.
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    It's a single colored block of gray,
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    there's no difference at all.
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    So this isn't any kind of magic trick.
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    It's the same shade of gray,
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    but take it away again,
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    and it looks different.
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    So what's happening here
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    is that the brain is using
    its prior expectations
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    built deeply into the circuits
    of the visual cortex
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    that a cast shadow dims
    the appearance of a surface,
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    so that we see B as lighter
    than it really is.
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    Here's one more example,
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    which shows just how quickly
    the brain can use new predictions
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    to change what we consciously experience.
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    Have a listen to this.
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    ([Sound])
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    Sounded strange, right?
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    Have a listen again and see
    if you can get anything.
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    ([Sound])
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    Still strange.
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    Now listen to this.
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    Recording: I think breakfast
    is a really terrible idea.
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    (Laughter)
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    Which I do.
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    So you heard some words there, right?
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    Now listen to the first sound again.
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    I'm just going to replay it.
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    ([Recording])
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    Yeah?
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    (Laughter)
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    So you can now hear words there.
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    One more more for luck.
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    ([Recording])
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    OK, so what's going on here?
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    The remarkable thing is the sensory
    information coming into the brain
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    hasn't changed at all.
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    All that's changed is your
    brain's best guess
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    of the causes of that sensory information.
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    And that changes what you
    consciously hear.
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    All this puts the brain
    basis of perception
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    in a bit of a different light.
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    Instead of perception depending largely
    on signals coming into the brain
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    from the outside world,
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    it depends as much,
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    if not more,
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    on perceptual predictions flowing
    in the opposite direction.
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    We don't just passively
    perceive the world,
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    we actively generate it.
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    The world we experience comes
    as much if not more
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    from the inside out
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    as from the outside in.
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    Let me give you one more
    example of perception
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    as this active, constructive process.
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    Here we've combined immersive
    virtual reality with image processing
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    to simulate the effects of overly
    strong perceptual predictions
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    on our experience.
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    In this panoramic video,
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    we've tranformed the world --
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    which is in this case Sussex Campus --
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    into a psychedilic playground.
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    We've processed the footage using
    an alogrithm based on Google's Deep Dream
Title:
How your brain hallucinates your conscious reality
Speaker:
Anil Seth
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
17:00

English subtitles

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