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Connecting Brain, Purpose

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Will not summarize or synthesize findings from neural science ... Advances in neurosciences are providing details at the micro level ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Connecting Brain, Purpose


1
Connecting Brain, Purpose LanguageUnderstandin
g Language Behavioras the Control of Perception
  • Gary A. Cziko
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • g-cziko_at_uiuc.edu garycziko.net

2
(start recording)
3
Apologies (5)
  • Not a brain or neuroscientist
  • Will not summarize or synthesize findings from
    neural science
  • Theory and computer simulations I will present
    are not my own (Wm. T. Powers)
  • Relativity little research has been done to
    support theory and arguments I will make
  • Dont have fancy PowerPoint slides

4
Excuses (3)
  • Am interested in biological bases of complex
    human behavior education language
  • Without Miracles (1995) Darwinian
  • The Things We Do (2000) Bernardian
  • Will share with you a fundamental building block
    for understanding how mind might be created from
    neurons
  • Will do some research, simulations and data
    analysis with you to demonstrate some behavioral
    phenomena and their possible underlying neural
    basis

5
Goals of presentation (4)
  • Explain how we can get human language from
    neurons (in well under an hour!)
  • Provide a different perspective on behavior
  • Neither behavioristic (S-R)nor cognitive (S-O-R)
    (lineal A -gt B causality)
  • Behavior as purposeful (circular causality)
  • Offer preliminary implications for understanding
    language and its underlying neural basis
  • How we might get mind from neurons
  • From the simplest unit of perception, thought
    behavior to the highest form of human perception,
    thought behavior

6
Presence of mentality(read-along quote)
  • The pursuance of future ends and the
  • choice of means for their attainment are
  • the mark and criterion of the presence of
  • mentality in a phenomenon. We impute no
  • mentality to sticks and stones, because they
  • never seem to move for the sake of anything,
  • but always when pushed, and then indifferently
  • and with no sign of choice. So we unhesitatingly
  • call them senseless.
  • --Wm. James, 1890 (American psychologist)

7
Behavior demonstratingpresence of mind
  • The rubber-band demo
  • What is the subject doing?

8
Computerized Rubber-Band Demo
  • Powers computer demo of compensatory tracking
    (Demo 1 Step F)
  • Correlation between (visible) Cursor and Handle
    (S-R)
  • Correlation between (invisible) Disturbance and
    Handle

9
Towards a model(read-along quote)
  • What we have is a circuit, not an arc or
  • broken segment of a circle. This circuit is more
  • truly termed organic than reflex, because the
  • motor response determines the stimulus, just as
  • truly as sensory stimulus determines movement.
  • Indeed, the movement is only for the sake of
  • determining the stimulus, of fixing what kind of
  • a stimulus it is . . .
  • --John Dewey, 1986 (American psychologist
    educator)

10
A model of compensatory tracking
  • Demo 2 Step G closing the loop
  • Explain components
  • Behavior with open loop
  • Close loop
  • Vary reference level (purpose)
  • Step
  • Continuously

11
(No Transcript)
12
Characteristics ofPerceptual Control
  • Provides a model of purposeful (intentional)
    behavior
  • Internal reference level (goal, purpose,
    objective, intention) essential
  • Perception (stimulus) affects behavior
    (response) AND behavior affects perception
  • Circular rather than lineal (one-way) causation
  • Perceptual control shown by LOW correlation
    between perception (input) and behavior
    (output)
  • Test of the controlled variable
  • Behavior understood as a means of controlling
    perception
  • Not vice versa as in both behaviorism(S -gt R)
    cognitive psychology (S -gt O -gt R)
  • No clear independent or dependent variable
  • Circular not straight line (lineal) causality

13
A Hierarchy of Perceptual Control (3)
  • More complex behavior seen as control of more
    complex perceptions
  • Inputs from lower-level perceptions combined to
    form higher-level perceptions
  • not new, e.g, complex cells, neural nets
  • Outputs from higher levels sent to levels as
    reference levels (goals, purpose)
  • new

14
(No Transcript)
15
Demonstration of Hierarchy
  • Volunteer maintains arm parallel to ground
  • Told to drop arm to side when hand pushed from
    above
  • Predictions?
  • Change in reference level from horizontal to
    vertical
  • Lower level will perceive push before upper level
    perceives it and is able to change the reference
    level for the lower system
  • Watch what happens!

16
The Whys and Hows of Behavior (2)
  • Answers to why questions about behavior found
    by going up to higher-level perceptual control
    systems
  • Why am I saying these sentences right now?
  • Answers to how questions about behavior found
    by going down to lower-level perceptual control
    systems
  • How am I saying these sentences right now?

17
Applications of PCT to Language (4)
  • Language behavior is purposeful, intentional,
    functional, goal-directed
  • Provides a social means of controlling ones
    perception
  • Language is hierarchical
  • auditory intensities gt phonetic features gt
    phonemes gt morphemes gt lexemes gt phrases gt
    clauses gt discourse
  • Hierarchy of control from articulation to
    pragmatics
  • Language behavior is usually successful despite
    many disturbances (e.g., environmental noise
    objects in mouth)

18
PCT provides a particular form of a connectionist
model (3)
  1. Circular perceptual control systems arranged
    hierarchically
  2. Neurons can compute (perceptrons) and transmit
    information (senory and motor systems)
  3. Neurons can act as a comparators (using
    inhibitory and excitatory synapses)

19
PCT provides an architecture for research
discovery (4)
  • Sensory (afferent) systems combining signals from
    lower levels
  • Motor (efferent) systems sending reference levels
    to lower-level comparators (desired perceptions,
    not motor commands)
  • Comparators (comparing upper-level outputs with
    lower-level inputs, with difference sent as
    reference level to lower level)
  • Evidence of control behavioral and neural
    (controlled variable)

20
Conclusions (3)
  • Advances in neurosciences are providing details
    at the micro level
  • An understanding of behavior as the control of
    perception provides a macro framework for
    understanding the micro-level details
  • Combining the two provides new important insights
    into the connections among brain, behavior,
    language and human purposes
  • i.e., how mind (and mindful behavior) might be
    constructed from neurons

21
Resources
  • Powers, W. T. (1973). Behavior The control of
    perception. Chicago Aldine de Gruyter.
  • Gary Czikos books (full text online via
    garycziko.net)
  • Without Miracles (1995)
  • The Things We Do (2000)
  • Control Systems Group website
  • www.ed.uiuc.edu/csg (these other computer
    demos)
  • Joel Walters (English, Bar-Ilan U)
  • Application of PCT to understanding bilingualism

22
Connecting Purpose, Brain, and LanguageUnderstan
ding Language Behavioras the Control of
Perception
  • Gary A. Cziko
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • g-cziko_at_uiuc.edu garycziko.net

23
(No Transcript)
24
  • What we have is a circuit, not an arc or broken
    segment of a circle. This circuit is more truly
    termed organic than reflex, because the motor
    response determines the stimulus, just as truly
    as sensory stimulus determines movement. Indeed,
    the movement is only for the sake of determining
    the stimulus, of fixing what kind of a stimulus
    it is, of interpreting it.(J. Dewey 1986, p.
    353)
  • It is possible to step back and treat the mind
    as one big monster response function from the
    total environment over the total past of the
    organism to future actions.--Allen Newell
    (1998).

25
(Overview)
  • Introduction
  • Demonstration model of purposeful behavior
  • Hierarchies of perceptual control
  • Applications to language
  • Implications for neural science
  • Resources for further exploration

26
Demonstration Model of Perceptual Control
(overview)
  • Rubber-band demo
  • Powers computer demo of compensatory tracking
    (Demo 1 Step F)
  • Dewey quote
  • Powers computer model of compensatory tracking
    (Demo 2 Step G closing the loop)
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