Active inference goes to school: the importance of active learning in the age of large language models

Author:

Di Paolo Laura Desirèe12ORCID,White Ben3,Guénin-Carlut Avel1ORCID,Constant Axel1ORCID,Clark Andy134

Affiliation:

1. Department of Engineering and Informatics, The University of Sussex , Brighton, UK

2. School of Psychology, Children & Technology Lab, The University of Sussex , Falmer (Brighton), UK

3. Department of Philosophy, The University of Sussex , Sussex, UK

4. Department of Philosophy, Macquarie University , Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Abstract

Human learning essentially involves embodied interactions with the material world. But our worlds now include increasing numbers of powerful and (apparently) disembodied generative artificial intelligence (AI). In what follows we ask how best to understand these new (somewhat ‘alien’, because of their disembodied nature) resources and how to incorporate them in our educational practices. We focus on methodologies that encourage exploration and embodied interactions with ‘prepared’ material environments, such as the carefully organized settings of Montessori education. Using the active inference framework, we approach our questions by thinking about human learning as epistemic foraging and prediction error minimization. We end by arguing that generative AI should figure naturally as new elements in prepared learning environments by facilitating sequences of precise prediction error enabling trajectories of self-correction. In these ways, we anticipate new synergies between (apparently) di s embodied and (essentially) embodied forms of intelligence. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Minds in movement: embodied cognition in the age of artificial intelligence’.

Funder

XSCAPE

Publisher

The Royal Society

Reference234 articles.

1. Montessori M . 1949 The absorbent mind. Adyar, India: The Theosophical Publishing House.

2. New Approaches to Robotics

3. Maturana HR , Varela FJ . 1991 Autopoiesis and cognition: the realization of the living. vol. 42. New York, NY: Springer Science & Business Media.

4. Gray P . 2013 Free to learn: why unleashing the instinct to play will make our children happier, more self-reliant, and better students for life. New York, NY: Basic Books.

5. Maturana HR , Varela FJ . 1987 The tree of knowledge: the biological roots of human understanding. Boulder, CO: New Science Library/Shambhala Publications.

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1. Minds in movement: embodied cognition in the age of artificial intelligence;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2024-08-19

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