CONCEPTUAL COORDINATION:

How the Mind Orders Experience in Time

 

WILLIAM J. CLANCEY

© Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers 1999

Order from the publisher (ISBN 0-8058-3143-6)

Errata Sheet

 

CONTENTS

Preface

Conceptual Coordination
Reader's guide
Acknowledgments

PART I - COMPUTATIONAL MODELS OF PROCESS MEMORY

1 Introduction: The Temporal Relations of Conceptualization

The Essential Idea: Matching and Copying Versus Activating in Place
Synchronous Versus Sequential Activation
Synchronous Activation: The Duck-Rabbit Ambiguous Figure
Sequential Activation: Explanation of Kolers' Color Phi Phenomenon
Historical Background: The Scientific Study of Everyday Phenomena
Theory in a Nutshell
Reconsidering What Programming Languages Take for Granted
Summary: Categorizing in Time
Organization of the Book

2 Computational Memory Architectures

Computer Language Approaches
Indexed Memory Array
Linked List Memory
Actors in Dataflow Graphs
Hidden Markov Models
SHRDLU's Procedural Knowledge
Production Rule Memory
Production Rule Basics
Procedural and Episodic Memory in Soar
"Subdeliberate" and "Subsymbolic" Memory
Reformulating the "Executive"-Implicit Learning
Systematicity and Compositionality in the "Language of Thought"
Chapter Summary

3 Neural Architectures for Categorization and Sequential Learning

TNGS: Neural Map Activation over Time
Sequential Connectionist Learning
Experiments with Nesting and Timing
Reinterpreting SRN in Terms of Neural Activation
Reinterpreting Stored Text Procedural Models as Neural Processes
Reinterpreting Activation Trace Diagrams as a Neural Theory

PART II - SERIAL LEARNING AS PHYSICAL COORDINATION

4 Coupled Perceptual-Motor Conception

The Example: Multiple Message Windows
Discussion: Figure-Ground Priorities
Why Did the Reminder Occur?
The Role of Social Context in Coordinated Action
Distinguishing Between Awareness and Representations

5 Extending a Felt Path

The Felt Path of a Melody Representation
A Felt Path in a Swimming Pool
Restructuring and Progressive Deepening
Alternate Representations of a Felt Path
Short-term Memory of Behavior Sequences
Use of an Anchor in Deliberate Sequential Coordination

6 Slips and Parallel Binding

Seeing What You Are Saying
Understanding "Slips"- Roles in a Sequence
Slip Patterns: A Coordination Mechanism or Stored Templates?
Exchanges and Bindings
Evidence for Parallel-Hierarchical Activation
Norman's Theory of Action

7 The Paintbrush Inventors: Analogy and Theorizing

Inventing a Synthetic Paintbrush
Compositions of Activities snd Perceptions
Activation Trace Representation of the Painters' Experience
Alternative Models of Analogical Thought
Importance of Learning and Activity Context
Storytelling as Coordinating
Conceptual Coordinating as Conversing with Materials

PART III - SPEAKING AS CREATING KNOWLEDGE

8 Bartlett's Reconstructive Memory

Remembering as Coordinating
"Schema" as an Active, Coordinating Process
Novelty in Manipulation of Materials
The Role of Emotion in Conceptual Coordination
Summary of Functional Architecture of Remembering

9 Transformational Processes, Grammars, and Self-Organizing Strings

Piaget's Transformational Processes
Chomsky's Mental Physiology
Berwick's Appeal to Connectionism
Kauffman's Autocatalytic Symbol Strings

10 Comprehension Difficulties Related to "Interference in Short-Term Memory"

The Interference Problem
Example of Notation for Acceptable Sentences
Embedded Propositions
Double Anchoring in Recursive Sentences
Permissible Syntactic Relations
Neural Processes Interpretation of the "Two Node" Limitation

11 Stored Descriptive-Schemas Revisited

Logical Novelty
Schank's Failure-Driven Model of Memory
Feigenbaum and Simon's EPAM
What EPAM learns
How EPAM Learnings
Recursiveness suggests conceptualization

12 Problem-Space Models Revisited

Studying Descriptive Models of Problem Solving
Problem-Solving Grammars
Model Construction in natural Language Understanding Programs
Relating Soar and Neomycin Terminology
Problem Spaces in NL-Soar and Neomycin
From Speaking to Grammars and Theories of Speaking
Reconsidering the "Knowledge Acquisition" Process
Using Knowledge Bases to "Parse" Human Behavior
Learning New Operators and Problem Spaces
 

13 Conclusions: The Nature and Role of Consciousness

What the Examples Showed
A Proper Interpretation of Activation Trace Diagrams
How Conventional Cognitive Models Need to be Revised
Goals and Intentionality
Learning
Where do the Lower Problem Spaces Come From?
Categories and Grounding
Representational Terminology
Subsymbolic
Behavior or Experience?
Understanding Patterns in Self-Organizing Mechanisms
Consciousness as Higher-Order Conceptual Coordination
Next Steps for Cognitive and Social Science
Questions about Neural Activation and Categorization processes
Implications for Cognitive and Social Psychology
Coordinating Conceptual Spaces Across Disciplines
Are There Principles for Facilitating Interdisciplinary Research?
REFERENCES
AUTHOR INDEX
SUBJECT INDEX


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