Theories of Mind: An Introduction to Cognitive Science - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Theories of Mind: An Introduction to Cognitive Science

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The scientific interdisciplinary study of the mind. ... The sentence, 'Mary has black hair.' Rules. Specify the relationship between propositions. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Theories of Mind: An Introduction to Cognitive Science


1
Theories of Mind An Introduction to Cognitive
Science
  • Jay Friedenberg
  • Gordon Silverman

2
Chapter One
  • Introduction Exploring Inner Space

3
What is cognitive science?
  • The scientific interdisciplinary study of the
    mind.
  • Uses the scientific method as well as other
    methodologies.
  • Encompasses multiple diverse disciplines.
  • Cooperation and communication between these
    disciplines is important.

4
Aspects of representation
  • A representation stands for something else it is
    symbolic.
  • The thing a representation stands for is called
    its referent.
  • A representation is realized by an entity such as
    a human or computer.

5
Categories of representation
  1. Concepts. Stand for a single thing or group of
    things. The word Apple.
  2. Propositions. Statements about the world. The
    sentence, Mary has black hair.
  3. Rules. Specify the relationship between
    propositions. If it is raining, I will bring my
    umbrella.
  4. Analogies. Allow us to make comparisons.
    Relationship between shoes and tires.

6
Digital representations
  • Information is coded discretely using fixed
    symbols such as letters or numbers.
  • Values can be specified exactly.
  • Many operators can be applied to the symbols.
  • Rules of these operations are called syntax.

7
Analog representations
  • Information represented in a continuous way.
  • Subject to fewer operations than digital
    representations.
  • Provide simple, direct solutions to some
    problems.
  • Visual images are a good example.

8
The dual-code hypothesis
  • Ideas can be digital and analog. We can form a
    verbal representation of a boat or a visual image
    of it and convert between these two codes.
  • However, concrete ideas such as automobile lend
    themselves better to analog representation while
    abstract ideas such as justice are better
    suited to digital symbolic representation.

9
Propositional hypothesis
  • More complex ideas are represented as
    sentence-like propositions.
  • The code for propositions is believed to be in an
    abstract logical format called a predicate
    calculus.
  • A predicate calculus specifies the relationships
    between elements.

10
Computation
  • Operations or transformations that are performed
    on representations.
  • In mathematics, examples would include addition,
    subtraction, multiplication, and division.
  • Broad categories of mental operations include
    sensation, perception, attention, memory,
    language, reasoning, and problem solving.

11
The tri-level hypothesis
  • The computational level. Specifies the problem.
  • The algorithmic level. Specifies the way the
    problem is solved.
  • The implementation level. Specifies the medium or
    physical substrate in which the problem-solving
    procedure is executed.

12
The interdisciplinary perspective
  • The story of the three blind men and the elephant
    shows that a complex phenomenon is best
    understood when studied from multiple
    perspectives.

13
Cognitive science approaches
  • The philosophical approach.
  • The psychological approach.
  • The cognitive approach.
  • The neuroscience approach.
  • The network approach.
  • The evolutionary approach.
  • The linguistic approach.
  • The artificial intelligence approach.
  • The robotics approach.
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