
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
- 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
Back to William J. Clancey
Home Page