•  18
    Effects of guided exploration on reaching measures of auditory peripersonal space
    with Mercedes X. Hüg, Fernando Bermejo, and Fabián C. Tommasini
    Frontiers in Psychology 13. 2022.
    Despite the recognized importance of bodily movements in spatial audition, few studies have integrated action-based protocols with spatial hearing in the peripersonal space. Recent work shows that tactile feedback and active exploration allow participants to improve performance in auditory distance perception tasks. However, the role of the different aspects involved in the learning phase, such as voluntary control of movement, proprioceptive cues, and the possibility of self-correcting errors, …Read more
  •  15
    Comment: How Your Own Becoming Feels
    Emotion Review 12 (4): 229-230. 2020.
    Mascolo successfully defends a relational, developmental approach to emotions. I draw parallels between his perspective and the enactive approach, in particular with the concept of participa...
  •  15
    Rediscovering Richard Held: Activity and Passivity in Perceptual Learning
    with Fernando Bermejo and Mercedes X. Hüg
    Frontiers in Psychology 11. 2020.
  •  14
    We examine the question of material agency as raised in material engagement theory (MET). Insofar as MET tends to highlight the causal roles played by extra-bodily material flows in human practices, the term “material agency” does not sufficiently distinguish cases in which these flows are part of an agentive engagement from cases in which they are not. We propose an operational criterion to effect such a distinction. We claim this criterion is organizational, i.e., systemic, and not causal. In …Read more
  •  12
    Paticipatory Object Perception
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 23 (5-6): 228-258. 2016.
    Social factors have so far been neglected in embodied theories of perception despite the wealth of phenomenological insights and empirical evidence indicating their importance. I examine evidence from developmental psychology and neuroscience and attempt an initial classification according to whether social factors play a contextual, enabling, or constitutive role in the ability to perceive objects in a detached manner, i.e. beyond their immediate instrumental use. While evidence of cross-cultur…Read more
  •  11
    Editorial: The social and enactive mind
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 8 (4): 409-415. 2009.
  •  11
    “The phenomenon of life” by Hans Jonas
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 36 (3). 2005.
  •  10
    An important amount of research effort in psychology and neuroscience over the past decades has focused on the problem of social cognition. This problem is understood as how we figure out other minds, relying only on indirect manifestations of other people's intentional states, which are assumed to be hidden, private and internal. Research on this question has mostly investigated how individual cognitive mechanisms achieve this task. A shift in the internalist assumptions regarding intentional s…Read more
  •  9
    A Mind of Many. Commentary on the target artcle by Ernst von Glasersfeld
    Constructivist Foundations 3 (2): 89-91. 2008.
    Open peer commentary on the target article “Who Conceives of Society?” by Ernst von Glasersfeld. Excerpt: While von Glasersfeld’s “epistemological model involves consciousness, memory, and some basic values” (§47), our argument from an enactive perspective is that these axiomatic elements are not atomic and already imply the participation of those social processes they intend to ground and that this fundamental intervention happens before these processes are constituted as knowable by the indivi…Read more
  •  5
    What Needs to Change for Us to Love a Place?
    Constructivist Foundations 17 (3): 211-214. 2022.
    Open peer commentary on the article “Loving the Earth by Loving a Place: A Situated Approach to the Love of Nature” by Laura Candiotto. Abstract: Candiotto elaborates a down-to-earth enactive epistemology and applies it to environmental ethics. I comment on the timeliness of her intervention and the challenges for an enactive account of place. I concur with her exhortation to a participatory loving of place by becoming native, but notice that the conditions for enacting it are inaccessible for m…Read more