Connectionism: Theory and Practice

Connectionism: Theory and Practice

Connectionism: Theory and Practice
Connectionism: Theory and Practice

Connectionism: Theory and Practice

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Overview

Over the last decade, an emerging form of computational modeling has steadily gained the respect of many researchers as a radically new and promising approach to cognitive science. Known by a number of names, including "connectionism," "neural networks," and "parallel distributed processing" (PDP), this method of computation attempts to model the neural proocesses that are assumed to underlie cognitive functions in human beings. Unlike the digital computation methods used by Al researchers, connectionist models claim to approximate the kind of spontaneous, creative, and somewhat unpredictable behavior of human agents. However, over the last few years, a heated controversy has arisen over the extent to which connectionist models are able to provide successful explanations for higher cognitive processes. A central theme of this book is the adequacy of recent attempts to implement higher cognitive processes in connectionist networks. Cognitive scientists, cognitive psychologists, linguists, philosophers, computer scientists, and others exploring this fascinating science will find this book essential reading.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195360356
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 08/20/1992
Series: |c NDCS |t New Directions in Cognitive Science , #3
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Simon Fraser University

Table of Contents

1.Using Coherence Assumptions to Discover the Underlying Causes of the Sensory Input3
Comment: Michael I. Jordan and Robert A. Jacobs21
2.A Deeper Unity: Some Feyerabendian Themes in Neurocomputational Form30
Comment: Charles Travis51
3.Towards a Microstructural Account of Human Reasoning69
4.Connectionism without Tears84
Comment: Michael E.J. Masson123
5.Grammatical Structure and Distributed Representations138
Comment: Tim van Gelder179
6.Structured Representations in Connectionist Systems?195
7.Local Modelling in Phonology229
8.Connectionism and the Philosophy of Mental Representation247
9.Connectionism and the Computional Neurobiology of Curve Detection277
10.PDP Learnability and Innate Knowledge of Language297
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