Works by Clark, Kevin B. (exact spelling)

9 found
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  1.  11
    Unpredictable homeodynamic and ambient constraints on irrational decision making of aneural and neural foragers.Kevin B. Clark - 2019 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42.
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  2.  10
    The humanness of artificial non-normative personalities.Kevin B. Clark - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40:e259.
    Technoscientific ambitions for perfecting human-like machines, by advancing state-of-the-art neuromorphic architectures and cognitive computing, may end in ironic regret without pondering the humanness of fallible artificial non-normative personalities. Self-organizing artificial personalities individualize machine performance and identity through fuzzy conscientiousness, emotionality, extraversion/introversion, and other traits, rendering insights into technology-assisted human evolution, robot ethology/pedagogy, and best practices against unwanted autonomous machine behavior.
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  3.  20
    Undecidability and opacity of metacognition in animals and humans.Kevin B. Clark & Derrick L. Hassert - 2013 - Frontiers in Psychology 4.
  4.  15
    Digital life, a theory of minds, and mapping human and machine cultural universals.Kevin B. Clark - 2020 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 43:e98.
    Emerging cybertechnologies, such as social digibots, bend epistemological conventions of life and culture already complicated by human and animal relationships. Virtually-augmented niches of machines and organic life promise new free-energy-governed selection of intelligent digital life. These provocative eco-evolutionary contexts demand a theory of (natural and artificial) minds to characterize and validate the immersive social phenomena universally-shaping cultural affordances.
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  5.  17
    Possible origins of consciousness in simple control over “involuntary” neuroimmunological action.Kevin B. Clark - 2018 - Consciousness and Cognition 61:76-78.
  6.  17
    Science and technology consortia in U.S. biomedical research: A paradigm shift in response to unsustainable academic growth.Curt Balch, Hugo Arias-Pulido, Soumya Banerjee, Alex K. Lancaster, Kevin B. Clark, Michael Perilstein, Brian Hawkins, John Rhodes, Piotr Sliz, Jon Wilkins & Thomas W. Chittenden - 2015 - Bioessays 37 (2):119-122.
    Graphical AbstractScience and technology consortia provide a viable solution for the recent unsustainable academic growth in biomedical research.
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  7.  3
    Communication consistency, completeness, and complexity of digital ideography in trustworthy mobile extended reality.Kevin B. Clark - 2023 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e239.
    Communication barriers long-associated with ideographs, including combinatorial grapholinguistic complexity, computational encoding–decoding complexity, and technological rendering and deployment, become trivialized through advancements in interoperable smart mobile digital devices. Such technologies impart unprecedented extended-reality user hazards only mitigated by unprecedented colloquial and bureaucratic societal norms. Digital age norms thus influence natural ideographic language origins and evolution in ways novel to human history.
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  8.  8
    Neurotropic enteroviruses co-opt “fair-weather-friend” commensal gut microbiota to drive host infection and central nervous system disturbances.Kevin B. Clark - 2019 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42.
    Some neurotropic enteroviruses hijack Trojan horse/raft commensal gut bacteria to render devastating biomimicking cryptic attacks on human/animal hosts. Such virus-microbe interactions manipulate hosts’ gut-brain axes with accompanying infection-cycle-optimizing central nervous system disturbances, including severe neurodevelopmental, neuromotor, and neuropsychiatric conditions. Co-opted bacteria thus indirectly influence host health, development, behavior, and mind as possible “fair-weather-friend” symbionts, switching from commensal to context-dependent pathogen-like strategies benefiting gut-bacteria fitness.
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  9.  2
    Ownership psychology as a “cognitive cell” adaptation: A minimalist model of microbial goods theory.Kevin B. Clark - 2023 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e330.
    Microbes perfect social interactions with intuitive logics and goal-directed reciprocity. These multilevel, cognition-resembling adaptations in Dictyostelid cellular molds enable individual-to-group viability through public/private bacterial farming and dynamic marketspaces. Like humans and animals, Dictyostelid livestock-ownership depends on environmental sensing, cooperation, and competition. Moreover, social-norm policing of cosmopolitan colonies coordinates farmer decisions, phenotypes, and ownership identities with bacteria herding, privatization, and consumption.
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