Same World, Differently Given: History-Dependent Perceptual Reorganization in Artificial Agents
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 19:19 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A slow perspective latent reorganizes perception so that identical observations are encoded differently depending on an agent's accumulated experience.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The author shows that a slow perspective latent g, which provides feedback to perceptual encoding and is itself updated through that encoding, allows identical observations to be represented differently depending on the agent's accumulated stance. In a minimal gridworld with a fixed spatial scaffold and sensory perturbations, three results follow: perturbation history leaves residue in adaptive plasticity after nominal conditions return, the latent reorganizes perceptual encodings accordingly, and only adaptive self-modulation produces the characteristic growth-then-stabilization dynamic, unlike rigid or always-open regimes. Gross behavior remains stable throughout, showing that the dominant
What carries the argument
The perspective latent g, a slowly evolving internal variable that modulates incoming perception and is updated by it, carrying accumulated stance to make current encodings history-dependent.
If this is right
- Perturbation history leaves measurable residue in adaptive plasticity after nominal conditions are restored.
- The perspective latent reorganizes perceptual encoding so identical observations are represented differently depending on prior experience.
- Only adaptive self-modulation yields the characteristic growth-then-stabilization dynamic, unlike rigid or always-open update regimes.
- Gross behavior remains stable throughout, indicating reorganization occurs primarily at the perceptual level rather than through behavioral change.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The separation of perceptual reorganization from behavioral stability suggests agents could maintain coherent internal perspectives across ambiguous inputs without retraining actions.
- Embedding such a latent in larger architectures might support consistent world models that accumulate experience without overwriting earlier encodings.
- The mechanism points to a possible route for artificial agents to exhibit perspectival continuity similar to how biological systems retain history in perceptual biases.
Load-bearing premise
Results obtained in a minimal gridworld with fixed spatial scaffold and controlled sensory perturbations generalize to history-dependent perspectival organization in artificial agents more broadly.
What would settle it
If the same observation after different perturbation histories produces statistically identical perceptual encodings, or if rigid and always-open update regimes produce the same growth-then-stabilization dynamic as the adaptive regime, the claimed mechanism would be falsified.
Figures
read the original abstract
What kind of internal organization would allow an artificial agent not only to adapt its behavior, but to sustain a history-sensitive perspective on its world? I present a minimal architecture in which a slow perspective latent $g$ feeds back into perception and is itself updated through perceptual processing. This allows identical observations to be encoded differently depending on the agent's accumulated stance. The model is evaluated in a minimal gridworld with a fixed spatial scaffold and sensory perturbations. Across analyses, three results emerge: first, perturbation history leaves measurable residue in adaptive plasticity after nominal conditions are restored. Second, the perspective latent reorganizes perceptual encoding, such that identical observations are represented differently depending on prior experience. Third, only adaptive self-modulation yields the characteristic growth-then-stabilization dynamic, unlike rigid or always-open update regimes. Gross behavior remains stable throughout, suggesting that the dominant reorganization is perceptual rather than behavioral. Together, these findings identify a minimal mechanism for history-dependent perspectival organization in artificial agents.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes a minimal architecture in which a slow perspective latent g feeds back into perceptual encoding and is updated through perceptual processing. This enables identical observations to be represented differently depending on the agent's accumulated history. The model is tested in a single minimal gridworld with fixed spatial scaffold and controlled sensory perturbations. Three main results are reported: (1) perturbation history leaves measurable residue in adaptive plasticity after conditions are restored; (2) the perspective latent reorganizes perceptual encodings in a history-dependent manner; (3) only adaptive self-modulation produces the characteristic growth-then-stabilization dynamic, unlike rigid or always-open regimes. Gross behavior remains stable, indicating that reorganization is primarily perceptual.
Significance. If the results hold under broader testing, the work identifies a minimal, self-contained mechanism for history-dependent perspectival organization in artificial agents. It distinguishes adaptive self-modulation from rigid or always-open update rules and shows that perceptual reorganization can occur without altering observable behavior. This provides a concrete, falsifiable starting point for modeling perspective in agents and could inform research on continual adaptation and internal state in reinforcement learning or cognitive architectures.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract, §3] Abstract and §3 (Experiments): All three reported results derive from a single minimal gridworld whose spatial scaffold is fixed and whose sensory perturbations are controlled and reversible. No additional environments, no scaling of state-space size, and no ablation removing the fixed spatial structure are described. This makes the generalization to 'history-dependent perspectival organization in artificial agents' load-bearing on an untested assumption that the observed plasticity residue and reorganization effect are not artifacts of the specific scaffold or perturbation schedule.
- [Abstract] Abstract: The claim that 'only adaptive self-modulation yields the characteristic growth-then-stabilization dynamic' is presented without quantitative comparison to the rigid and always-open regimes (no error bars, no statistical tests, no effect sizes). Because the central distinction among update regimes is load-bearing for the third result, the absence of these details prevents verification that the dynamic is uniquely produced by adaptive self-modulation rather than by other implementation choices.
- [Abstract] Abstract: No equations or pseudocode are supplied for the perspective latent g, its feedback into perception, or the self-modulation rule. Without these definitions it is impossible to determine whether the reported reorganization is a non-trivial emergent property or follows directly from the model's construction (e.g., whether g is defined in a way that forces history dependence by fiat).
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abstract states that 'gross behavior remains stable throughout' but provides no quantitative measure (e.g., reward curves, action entropy) to support this claim. Adding a brief behavioral metric would strengthen the assertion that reorganization is perceptual rather than behavioral.
- [Abstract] The phrase 'slow perspective latent g' is introduced without prior definition or reference to related work on slow feature analysis or latent dynamics; a short sentence situating g relative to existing concepts would improve accessibility.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive and detailed comments. The points raised help clarify the scope, quantitative support, and formal presentation of our minimal architecture. We respond to each major comment below and indicate the revisions we will make.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract, §3] Abstract and §3 (Experiments): All three reported results derive from a single minimal gridworld whose spatial scaffold is fixed and whose sensory perturbations are controlled and reversible. No additional environments, no scaling of state-space size, and no ablation removing the fixed spatial structure are described. This makes the generalization to 'history-dependent perspectival organization in artificial agents' load-bearing on an untested assumption that the observed plasticity residue and reorganization effect are not artifacts of the specific scaffold or perturbation schedule.
Authors: The single minimal gridworld with fixed scaffold and reversible perturbations was deliberately chosen to isolate the history-dependent effects of the perspective latent without confounding behavioral changes or uncontrolled variables. This setup enables precise measurement of plasticity residue and perceptual reorganization. We agree, however, that the current scope limits broad generalization claims. In revision we will (i) temper the abstract language to read 'in a minimal gridworld agent' rather than the more general phrasing, (ii) add an explicit limitations subsection in the discussion that states the results are demonstrated under this controlled scaffold, and (iii) outline concrete directions for future scaling and ablation studies. No new experiments are added at this stage, but the text revisions directly address the concern about untested assumptions. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The claim that 'only adaptive self-modulation yields the characteristic growth-then-stabilization dynamic' is presented without quantitative comparison to the rigid and always-open regimes (no error bars, no statistical tests, no effect sizes). Because the central distinction among update regimes is load-bearing for the third result, the absence of these details prevents verification that the dynamic is uniquely produced by adaptive self-modulation rather than by other implementation choices.
Authors: The main-text figures already display the growth-then-stabilization pattern across regimes, but the abstract summary omits the supporting quantitative details. We will revise the manuscript to add error bars to the relevant plots, report statistical comparisons (e.g., paired t-tests or ANOVA with p-values) between the three update regimes, and include effect-size measures for the stabilization phase. The abstract will be updated to reference these quantitative distinctions or to qualify the claim as supported by the statistical evidence presented in the results section. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: No equations or pseudocode are supplied for the perspective latent g, its feedback into perception, or the self-modulation rule. Without these definitions it is impossible to determine whether the reported reorganization is a non-trivial emergent property or follows directly from the model's construction (e.g., whether g is defined in a way that forces history dependence by fiat).
Authors: Section 2 of the manuscript defines the perspective latent g, its feedback into the perceptual encoder, and the adaptive self-modulation rule. To make these definitions immediately accessible and to demonstrate that history dependence emerges from the closed-loop dynamics rather than being imposed by fiat, we will add a short appendix containing the core equations together with pseudocode for the perceptual update loop. This addition will allow readers to verify the non-trivial nature of the reorganization. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: empirical results from proposed architecture do not reduce to definitional inputs
full rationale
The paper proposes a minimal architecture with a slow perspective latent g that feeds back into perception and is updated through it, then reports three empirical results from simulations in a single minimal gridworld: residue in plasticity, reorganization of identical observations by prior experience, and growth-then-stabilization only under adaptive self-modulation. No equations, formal derivations, fitted parameters, or self-citations are shown that could make any claim equivalent to its inputs by construction. The claims rest on observed simulation outcomes rather than tautological redefinitions or load-bearing self-references, rendering the chain self-contained.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption A minimal gridworld with fixed spatial scaffold and sensory perturbations is sufficient to demonstrate general history-dependent perceptual reorganization.
invented entities (1)
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slow perspective latent g
no independent evidence
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
a slow perspective latent g feeds back into perception and is itself updated through perceptual processing... salience gating... self-modulating plasticity... growth-then-stabilization dynamic
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/AlexanderDuality.leanalexander_duality_circle_linking unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
fixed 23×7 gridworld with... 8-dimensional local patch
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
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Body-Grounded Perspective Formation and Conative Attunement in Artificial Agents
Proposes a body-grounded perspective model for AI agents using interoceptive viability signals, a Fisher-style metric on fused states, and conative alignment to produce stable body-directed behavior in a reward-free g...
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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work page 2003
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[2]
(2014).The Feeling Body: Affective Science Meets the Enactive Mind
Colombetti, G. (2014).The Feeling Body: Affective Science Meets the Enactive Mind. MIT Press. Di Paolo, E. A. (2006). Autopoiesis, adaptivity, teleology, agency. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, 4:429–452. Dreyfus, H. L. (2008). Why heideggerian ai failed and how fixing it would require making it more heideggerian. InThe Me- chanical Mind in Hist...
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[3]
Kaelbling, L. P., Littman, M. L., and Cassandra, A. R. (1998). Plan- ning and acting in partially observable stochastic domains. Artificial Intelligence, 101(1-2):99–134. Kegan, R. (1982).The Evolving Self: Problem and Process in Human Development. Harvard University Press. Kirchhoff, M. D. and Froese, T. (2017). Where there is life there is mind: In supp...
work page 1998
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[4]
(2013).Phenomenology of Perception
Merleau-Ponty, M. (2013).Phenomenology of Perception. Rout- ledge. Translated fromPh ´enom´enologie de la perception. Miconi, T., Rawal, A., Clune, J., and Stanley, K. O. (2019). Back- propamine: training self-modifying neural networks with dif- ferentiable neuromodulated plasticity. InInternational Con- ference on Learning Representations. Murray, T., Mc...
work page 2013
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