
This work proposes a developmental and computational framework uniting the concepts of resonance, temporal organization, and consciousness. It argues that language and cognition emerge not from isolated neural computation but from embodied interpersonal resonance — the rhythmic, affective, and predictive coupling between caregiver and infant. Building on findings from developmental psychology, social neuroscience, and predictive processing, the model traces four developmental phases of resonance: symbiotic, pattern, symbolic, and reflexive. These phases describe how temporal synchrony, shared affect, and pattern extraction gradually evolve into symbolic communication and self-reflective awareness. Integrating this developmental framework with the Space–Time–Consciousness (STC) model, the work maps measurable resonance parameters onto formal variables: presence (psi), processing velocity (vg), systemic order (Lambda), and subjective time (Ts). This mapping provides a quantitative language for linking physiological, behavioral, and cognitive data. Within the free-energy principle, resonance is interpreted as a social mechanism for minimizing prediction error and maintaining low-entropy relational states. The resulting theory offers testable predictions across domains — from early language acquisition and neural synchrony to phenomenological time perception and consciousness. Beyond its empirical utility, the model reframes mind and self not as individual computations but as emergent properties of shared temporal coherence. Resonance, in this view, is the foundational process through which temporal alignment becomes meaning, and meaning becomes consciousness. Researchers across disciplines are invited to critically engage with, test, or refine the framework presented in this work.
This work develops a theoretical and computational framework uniting the concepts of resonance, temporal organization, and consciousness. It argues that language and cognition emerge not from isolated neural computation but from embodied interpersonal resonance; the rhythmic, affective, and predictive coupling between caregiver and infant. Drawing on findings from developmental psychology, social neuroscience, and predictive processing, the model traces four developmental phases of resonance: symbiotic, pattern, symbolic, and reflexive. Integrating this developmental framework with the Space–Time–Consciousness (STC) model, the work maps measurable resonance parameters onto formal variables: presence (ψ), processing velocity (v₍g₎), systemic order (Λ), and subjective time (Tₛ). This mapping provides a quantitative bridge between early social dynamics and formal models of mind. The framework reframes consciousness as the internalization of temporal resonance — the process through which shared rhythms become thought, and thought becomes awareness.
Consciousness, Developmental psychology, FOS: Clinical medicine, predictive processing, Neurosciences, interpersonal synchrony, Language Development, pace-time model, FOS: Psychology, Child Development, resonance, free energy principle, Psychology, Child Language
Consciousness, Developmental psychology, FOS: Clinical medicine, predictive processing, Neurosciences, interpersonal synchrony, Language Development, pace-time model, FOS: Psychology, Child Development, resonance, free energy principle, Psychology, Child Language
| selected citations These citations are derived from selected sources. This is an alternative to the "Influence" indicator, which also reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | 0 | |
| popularity This indicator reflects the "current" impact/attention (the "hype") of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network. | Average | |
| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Average | |
| impulse This indicator reflects the initial momentum of an article directly after its publication, based on the underlying citation network. | Average |
