Systematicity commonly means that having certain cognitive capacities entails having certain other cognitive capacities. Learning is a cognitive capacity central to cognitive science, but systematic learning of cognitive capacities — second-order systematicity has received little investigation. We proposed associative learning as an instance of second-order systematicity that poses a paradox for classical theory, because this form of systematicity involves the kinds of associative constructions that were explicitly rejected by the classical explanation. In fact, both first and second-order forms of systematicity can be derived from the formal, category-theoretic concept of universalmorphisms to address this problem. In this paper, we derive...
One of the most influential recent arguments regarding the nature of the cognitive architecture take...
Two theories of associative memory that differ in the hypothesized structure of the memory trace (mu...
The authors propose in this chapter to use abstract algebra to unify different models of theories of...
Systematicity is a property of cognitive architecture whereby having certain cognitive capacities im...
A complete theory of cognitive architecture (i.e., the basic processes and modes of composition that...
Classical and Connectionist theories of cognitive architecture seek to explain systematicity (i.e., ...
Human cognitive capacity includes recursively definable concepts, which are prevalent in domains inv...
<div><p>Cognitive science recognizes two kinds of systematicity: (1) as the property where certain c...
Human cognitive capacity includes recursively definable con-cepts, which are prevalent in domains in...
Cognitive science recognizes two kinds of systematicity: (1) as the property where certain cognitive...
Systematicity is a pervasive property of cognitive behaviour (e.g., language and reasoning) whereby ...
Neural network approaches to cognition that adhere to associationist processing hold that the system...
The systematicity argument only challenges connectionism if systematicity is a general property of c...
Human cognition is said to be systematic: cognitive ability generalizes to structurally related beha...
At root, the systematicity debate over classical versus connectionist explanations for cognitive arc...
One of the most influential recent arguments regarding the nature of the cognitive architecture take...
Two theories of associative memory that differ in the hypothesized structure of the memory trace (mu...
The authors propose in this chapter to use abstract algebra to unify different models of theories of...
Systematicity is a property of cognitive architecture whereby having certain cognitive capacities im...
A complete theory of cognitive architecture (i.e., the basic processes and modes of composition that...
Classical and Connectionist theories of cognitive architecture seek to explain systematicity (i.e., ...
Human cognitive capacity includes recursively definable concepts, which are prevalent in domains inv...
<div><p>Cognitive science recognizes two kinds of systematicity: (1) as the property where certain c...
Human cognitive capacity includes recursively definable con-cepts, which are prevalent in domains in...
Cognitive science recognizes two kinds of systematicity: (1) as the property where certain cognitive...
Systematicity is a pervasive property of cognitive behaviour (e.g., language and reasoning) whereby ...
Neural network approaches to cognition that adhere to associationist processing hold that the system...
The systematicity argument only challenges connectionism if systematicity is a general property of c...
Human cognition is said to be systematic: cognitive ability generalizes to structurally related beha...
At root, the systematicity debate over classical versus connectionist explanations for cognitive arc...
One of the most influential recent arguments regarding the nature of the cognitive architecture take...
Two theories of associative memory that differ in the hypothesized structure of the memory trace (mu...
The authors propose in this chapter to use abstract algebra to unify different models of theories of...