Cerebro predictivo y autismo.
Pellicano and Burr proposed that in autistic individuals, our prior expectations carry less weight, allowing sensory information to enter more forcefully; Van de Cruys and his team put forward, almost simultaneously, a different idea: we assign excessive weight to error, so that no detail can be dismissed as mere noise. Two contradictory theories to explain the same experience: a world perceived as all too real. From this arises what is often called "inflexibility." Seen from the perspective of the predictive brain, routine functions as a way to manage a flow of errors that would otherwise continue unabated, and maintaining certain constants may be the condition for life to function. In this video, I propose concrete ways to build changes that the autistic structure can sustain, based on predictability rather than rigidity.

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