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James M. Kilner

Researcher at University College London

Publications -  116
Citations -  15365

James M. Kilner is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mirror neuron & Premotor cortex. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 113 publications receiving 13555 citations. Previous affiliations of James M. Kilner include UCL Institute of Neurology & Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging.

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The mismatch negativity: a review of underlying mechanisms.

TL;DR: A review of studies that focus on neuronal mechanisms underlying the MMN generation, discusses the two major explanatory hypotheses, and proposes predictive coding as a general framework that attempts to unify both.
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A free energy principle for the brain.

TL;DR: This paper looks at the models entailed by the brain and how minimisation of its free energy can explain its dynamics and structure and assumes that the system's state and structure encode an implicit and probabilistic model of the environment.
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Predictive coding: an account of the mirror neuron system.

TL;DR: The function of the mirror system can be understood within a predictive coding framework that appeals to the statistical approach known as empirical Bayes and the outline of the underlying computational mechanisms are provided.
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An interference effect of observed biological movement on action.

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that observing another human making incongruent movements has a significant interference effect on executed movements, and suggest that the simultaneous activation of the overlapping neural networks that process movement observation and execution infers a measurable cost to motor control.
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Action and behavior: a free-energy formulation

TL;DR: The free-energy formulation may provide an alternative perspective on the motor control that places it in an intimate relationship with perception, and can explain why adaptive behavior emerges in biological agents and suggests a simple alternative to optimal control theory.