|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
One: Nuts and Bolts.- 1. Mental Representation.- Symbolism: The
Classical Paradigm.- Cracks in the Symbolic Paradigm.-
Connectionism: The Other Paradigm.- Methods of Models.- Assessing
Theories of Mental Representation.- 2. Partitioned
Representations.- General Overview.- The Contents of Spaces.-
Parochial Reasoning.- Primary Contexts.- Partitioned Semantics.-
Coherence.- Consolidation.- Secondary Contexts.- A Typology of
Spaces.- Where Partitioned Representations Get Their Power.-
Summary and Conclusions.- 3. Language: Process and Structure.- A
Simple Philosophy of Language.- Linguistic Explanation.- The
Process of Language Understanding.- Linguistic Evidence for Mental
Representations.- 4. Three Levels of Language Processing.-
Parochial Processing.- Distribution.- Contextualization.- An
Example Discourse.- Conclusions.- Two: Studies in Language.- 5.
Pedro's Donkey and Oedipus's Mother.- Some Common Parochial
Linguistic Processes.- Some Common Cases of Distribution.-
Interaction of Distribution and Parochial Processes.- Summary and
Conclusions.- 6. Satisfying Presuppositions in Discourse.- The
Problem of Presupposition.- Presupposition and Parochial
Processing.- What Happens in Complex Sentences?.- Conclusions.- 7.
Space Frogs and Henry Ford.- Linguistic Evidence for
Contextualization.- The Semantic Contributions of Space Cues.-
Summary.- 8. Temporal Aspect.- Reference Time: Temporal
Perspective.- Semantics and Construction.- Reference Time:
Contextualization.- The Case of the Present Perfect.- Conclusion.-
9. General Conclusions.- An Assessment of Partitioned
Representations.- Prospectus.- The Importance of Partitioned
Representations.- Appendices: Formal Models.- 10. A Logic of
Partitioned Representations.- The Syntax of PR.- Rules of Inference
for PR.- The Semantics of PR.- Soundness.- Conclusions.- 11.
Generalized Natural Deduction.- Generalized Natural Deduction.-
Time and Action.- Frames.- Summary and Conclusions.- 12. A
Computational Model.- The Design of Spaceprobe.- Customizing
Digestion.- Restructuring Rules for Distribution.- Handling
Queries.- Language Understanding in Spaceprobe.- Summary.-
References.- Author Index.
The modern study of cognition finds itself with two widely endorsed
but seemingly incongruous theoretical paradigms. The first of
these, inspired by formal logic and the digital computer, sees
reasoning in the principled manipulation of structured symbolic
representations. The second, inspired by the physiology of the
brain, sees reasoning as the behavior that emerges from the direct
interactions found in large networks of simple processing
components. Each paradigm has its own accomplishments, problems,
methodology, proponents, and agenda.
This book records the thoughts of researchers -- from both
computer science and philosophy -- on resolving the debate between
the symbolic and connectionist paradigms. It addresses theoretical
and methodological issues throughout, but at the same time exhibits
the current attempts of practicing cognitive scientists to solve
real problems.
The modern study of cognition finds itself with two widely endorsed
but seemingly incongruous theoretical paradigms. The first of
these, inspired by formal logic and the digital computer, sees
reasoning in the principled manipulation of structured symbolic
representations. The second, inspired by the physiology of the
brain, sees reasoning as the behavior that emerges from the direct
interactions found in large networks of simple processing
components. Each paradigm has its own accomplishments, problems,
methodology, proponents, and agenda.
This book records the thoughts of researchers -- from both
computer science and philosophy -- on resolving the debate between
the symbolic and connectionist paradigms. It addresses theoretical
and methodological issues throughout, but at the same time exhibits
the current attempts of practicing cognitive scientists to solve
real problems.
The University of Kansas (KU) is a public research university and
the largest university in the state of Kansas. Created by the staff
of the KU libraries, KU ScholarWorks is the digital repository of
the University. It contains scholarly work created by KU faculty
and staff, as well as material from the University Archives. KU
ScholarWorks makes important research and historical items
available to a wider audience and helps assure their long-term
preservation. The University of Kansas's KU ScholarWorks Pre-1923
Theses and Dissertation collection was digitized by the Scholarly
Communications program staff in the KU Libraries' Center for
Digital Scholarship. These theses and dissertations range from 1883
- 1921 and reflect topics from Engineering and History to Economics
and Chemistry, including titles like A Study of Terpeneless Lemon
Extracts, English Interest in the Abolition of the Slave Trade, and
Aspects of the Gothic Romance.
|
|