1
From: "Human Potential & Development."
Split Justification: Development fundamentally involves both our inner landscape (**Internal World**) and our interaction with everything outside us (**External World**). (Ref: Subject-Object Distinction)..
2
From: "Internal World (The Self)"
Split Justification: The Internal World involves both mental processes (**Cognitive Sphere**) and physical experiences (**Somatic Sphere**). (Ref: Mind-Body Distinction)
3
From: "Cognitive Sphere"
Split Justification: Cognition operates via deliberate, logical steps (**Analytical Processing**) and faster, intuitive pattern-matching (**Intuitive/Associative Processing**). (Ref: Dual Process Theory)
4
From: "Intuitive/Associative Processing"
Split Justification: Intuitive/associative processing fundamentally operates in two distinct, yet complementary, modes: either by rapidly identifying and utilizing pre-existing patterns and associations (often automatically and implicitly), or by forming new, non-obvious connections that lead to emergent insights and novel ideas. These two categories comprehensively cover the scope of how this cognitive function processes information.
5
From: "Pattern Matching & Implicit Activation"
Split Justification: ** This dichotomy fundamentally separates the rapid, often automatic, identification and utilization of patterns based on direct sensory input (e.g., recognizing faces, sounds, immediate environmental threats) from the rapid, often automatic, identification and utilization of patterns based on abstract meaning, categories, semantic knowledge, and higher-level schema (e.g., understanding language, social cues, expert intuition). These two categories delineate distinct levels of information abstraction in pattern processing, comprehensively covering the scope of how pre-existing patterns are implicitly identified and utilized.
6
From: "Perceptual Pattern Matching & Activation"
Split Justification: This dichotomy fundamentally separates the rapid, often automatic, identification and utilization of patterns derived from external sensory input (e.g., visual scenes, sounds, tactile sensations from the environment) from those derived from internal bodily sensations (e.g., proprioception, interoception, vestibular sense). These two categories comprehensively cover all sources of direct sensory input for pattern processing.
7
From: "Interoceptive & Proprioceptive Pattern Matching & Activation"
Split Justification: This dichotomy fundamentally separates the rapid, often automatic, identification and utilization of patterns based on internal physiological states (interoception) from those based on body position, movement, and muscle tension (proprioception). These two categories represent distinct sensory systems within the internal body, comprehensively covering the scope of how these specific types of perceptual patterns are implicitly identified and utilized.
8
From: "Interoceptive Pattern Matching & Activation"
Split Justification: This dichotomy fundamentally separates interoceptive pattern matching that primarily concerns the regulation of internal bodily states to maintain homeostasis and address basic physiological needs (e.g., hunger, thirst, temperature, pain, fatigue) from interoceptive pattern matching that primarily concerns the recognition and implicit interpretation of bodily sensations that constitute or accompany affective and emotional states (e.g., heart rate changes associated with anxiety, gut feelings associated with fear or excitement). These two categories comprehensively cover the primary functional domains of interoceptive pattern recognition and activation.
9
From: "Affective & Emotional State Pattern Matching"
Split Justification: This dichotomy fundamentally separates the rapid, often automatic, identification and utilization of patterns based on the continuous, dimensional aspects of feeling (e.g., valence and arousal, often referred to as core affect) from those based on more specific, categorical emotional states (e.g., fear, joy, anger), which involve distinct, often multi-faceted, physiological signatures. These two categories comprehensively cover the primary ways in which interoceptive patterns of affective and emotional states are implicitly recognized.
10
From: "Core Affect Pattern Matching"
Split Justification: This dichotomy fundamentally separates the rapid, often automatic, identification and utilization of patterns based on the hedonic quality (pleasantness or unpleasantness) of core affect from those based on the activation level (arousal or deactivation). These two dimensions are universally recognized as the mutually exclusive and comprehensively exhaustive components defining core affect, together allowing for a complete implicit understanding of an individual's basic feeling state.
11
From: "Core Affect Arousal Pattern Matching"
Split Justification: This dichotomy fundamentally separates the rapid, often automatic, identification and utilization of interoceptive patterns signaling a state of high physiological activation or energy (e.g., racing heart, heightened alertness) from those signaling a state of low physiological activation, deactivation, or calmness (e.g., slowed heart rate, relaxation). These two categories represent the mutually exclusive and comprehensively exhaustive poles of the arousal dimension within core affect, fully covering the spectrum of activation levels implicitly recognized from interoceptive cues.
12
From: "Core Affect Low Arousal Pattern Matching"
Split Justification: This dichotomy fundamentally separates the rapid, often automatic, identification and utilization of interoceptive patterns signaling a state of low physiological activation associated with restoration, ease, and peaceful quietude (e.g., relaxation, meditative states, deep rest) from those signaling a state of low physiological activation associated with depletion, exhaustion, lethargy, or defensive deactivation (e.g., chronic fatigue, burnout, hypoarousal as a freeze response). These two categories represent mutually exclusive and comprehensively exhaustive qualitative distinctions within the broader scope of low arousal states, enabling the implicit differentiation between beneficial and adverse forms of physiological deactivation.
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Topic: "Core Affect Restorative Low Arousal Pattern Matching" (W5795)