Connectionist models of cognition and perception : proceedings of the Seventh Neural Computation and Psychology Workshop, Brighton, England, 17-19 September 2001

Bibliographic Information

Connectionist models of cognition and perception : proceedings of the Seventh Neural Computation and Psychology Workshop, Brighton, England, 17-19 September 2001

editors, John A. Bullinaria, Will Lowe

(Progress in neural processing, 14)

World Scientific, c2002

Available at  / 10 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and author index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Connectionist Models of Cognition and Perception collects together refereed versions of twenty-three papers presented at the Seventh Neural Computation and Psychology Workshop (NCPW7). This workshop series is a well-established and unique forum that brings together researchers from such diverse disciplines as artificial intelligence, cognitive science, computer science, neurobiology, philosophy and psychology to discuss their latest work on connectionist modelling in psychology.The articles have the main theme of connectionist modelling of cognition and perception, and are organised into six sections, on: cell assemblies, representation, memory, perception, vision and language. This book is an invaluable resource for researchers interested in neural models of psychological phenomena.

Table of Contents

  • Cell assemblies: describing low level psychological phenomena through cell assemblies, C.R. Huyck
  • the implications of binding for models of cognitive brain function, P.H. de Vries and G.J. Dalenoort. Representation: the role of perception and action in object categorization, A. Borghi et al
  • perception-orientated representation in problem solving, A. Wichert. Memory: habituation during encoding of episodic memory, S. Sikstrom
  • short-term memory in a network of spiking neurons, J. Sougne. Vision: efficient processing in the retina, B.T. Vincent
  • implementation of visual routines, G.J. van Tonder and Y. Ejima. Perception: natural scene perception - visual attractors and image processing, A. Chauvin et al
  • Ebbinghaus illusion - questioning the role of conceptual similarity, S.M. Lambert and A.E. Azzi. Language: integrating perception and production in a neural network model, G. Westermann and E.R. Miranda
  • the influence of semantics in lexical selection in speech, R.A.I. Davies. (Part contents)

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