CONCEPT
As-If Body Loop
Damasio's mechanism for how the brain can <em>simulate</em> bodily states internally — a shortcut that depends on prior actual embodiment, and which marks the limit of how far disembodied systems can approximate felt evaluation.
The as-if body loop is Damasio's term for a neurological mechanism by which the brain generates somatic marker signals internally, simulating the body's response rather than requiring actual peripheral activation. It operates as a shortcut: rather than sending signals down to the body and receiving them back, the brain recreates the felt state directly in somatosensory cortex. The loop is crucial for fast decision-making, but it has a structural dependency that matters enormously for AI — the simulation can only reconstruct states the body has previously produced. A system with no body has no experiential archive from which to simulate.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The concept was introduced in Descartes' Error to answer an obvious objection: if somatic markers require actual bodily activation, decision-making would be impossibly slow. The as-if loop resolves the objection by positing that the brain can bypass actual activation and generate the equivalent somatosensory state directly.
The mechanism depends on a principle that applies broadly