concept
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concept:particle-plasticityParticle Plasticity
Physical plasticity of individual cells or particles enabling adaptation to novel environments.
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Concepts (2)
concept
- Plasticityrelated_toProperty of minds to adapt to radical changes in substrate, form, and embodiment across lifetime and evolution.
- Phenotypic Plasticity of Particlesrelated_toAbility of a particle to change phenotype in response to context, enabling coordinated differentiation and solving HFHF in fraternal transitions
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- The capacity of cognitive systems to adapt to drastic body alterations within the lifetime of an agent; key to understanding mind-body relationship.
- Experience-dependent changes in synaptic weights, implementing learning of A, B, D matrices.
- Authors argue plasticity is key to creating heritable collective fitness differences without particle-level selection conflict
- The Self is not fixed; its boundaries, goals, and substrate can change during the lifetime of an agent.
- Capacity of a single genotype to produce different phenotypes in response to environment; a key enabler for evolution.
- The ability of biological structures to adjust to perturbations (injury, internal modifications) and still accomplish adaptive tasks across multiple problem spaces.
- Learning mechanism: parameter updates resemble classical Hebbian learning with associative and decay terms.