Predictive Regulation in Affective and Adaptive Behaviour: An Allostatic-Cybernetics Perspective
Book chapter, 2017

In this chapter, different notions of allostasis (the process of achieving stability through change) as they apply to adaptive behavior are presented. The authors discuss how notions of allostasis can be usefully applied to Cybernetics-based homeostatic systems. Particular emphasis is placed upon affective states – motivational and emotional – and, above all, the notion of ‘predictive’ regulation, as distinct from forms of ‘reactive’ regulation, in homeostatic systems. The authors focus here on Ashby’s ultrastability concept that entails behavior change for correcting homeostatic errors (deviations from the healthy range of essential, physiological, variables). The authors consider how the ultrastability concept can be broadened to incorporate allostatic mechanisms and how they may enhance adaptive physiological and behavioral activity. Finally, this chapter references different (Cybernetics-based) theoretical frameworks that incorporate the notion of allostasis. The article then attempts to untangle how the given perspectives fit into the ‘allostatic ultrastable systems’ framework postulated by the authors.

Goal-Directed Behaviour

Equilibrium

Homeostasis

Ashby

Predictive Processing

Emotions

Allostatic Ultrastable Systems.

Author

Robert Lowe

University of Skövde

University of Gothenburg

Alexander Almér

University of Gothenburg

Gordana Dodig Crnkovic

University of Gothenburg

Advanced Research on Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures. A volume in the Advances in Computational Intelligence and Robotics (ACIR) Book Series.

148-177

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Life Science Engineering (2010-2018)

Subject Categories

Psychology (excluding Applied Psychology)

DOI

10.4018/978-1-5225-1947-8

More information

Latest update

7/26/2021