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Introduction to Cognitive Science

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Title: Introduction to Cognitive Science


1
Introduction to Cognitive Science
  • Sept 2005 Lecture 1 Joe Lau Philosophy
    HKU

2
Topics
  • About this course
  • What is cognitive science?
  • Methodology
  • The computer model of the mind

3
About this course
4
About this course
  • Course coordinator
  • Joe Lau
  • Other teachers
  • Course tutors
  • Antonio Cheung and Elaine Lau
  • Course web site
  • http//philosophy.hku.hk/courses/cogn1001
  • Assessment
  • 60 exam -- 2 hours.
  • 25 problem sets -- 5 problem sets one for each
    topic.
  • 10 tutorial participation.
  • 5 tutorial attendance.

5
What is cognitive science?
6
What is cognitive science?
  • Answer Cognitive science is the science of mind
    and behavior.

7
Feature 1
  • Cognitive science studies MIND AND BEHAVIOR
  • Mental states and processes inside the brain
  • Emotions, knowledge of language, reasoning
  • The behavior caused by these processes
  • Facial expressions, speech
  • The normal mind
  • The abnormal mind
  • Autism, Cotard delusion

8
Feature 2
  • Cognitive science is a SCIENCE.
  • Theories and hypotheses have to be tested.
  • How? Check whether they can explain the data from
    experiments and observations.

9
Why study cognitive science?
Man is the Measure of all Things. Protagoras
of Abdera ( c. 480-410 B.C.)
  • Intellectual value
  • Practical value
  • Education
  • AI and technology
  • Medical application
  • Educational value
  • Entertainment value!

10
Methodology of cognitive science
11
Methodology
  • Some distinctive features about research methods
    and explanations in cogsci.
  • Brain-based explanations
  • Functional explanations
  • Interdisciplinary approach
  • The computational model of the mind

12
400 BC - Hippocrates
  • Founder of Western medicine
  • Men ought to know that from the brain, and from
    the brain only, arise our pleasures, joys,
    laughter and jests, as well as our sorrows,
    pains, grievances, and tears. Through
    it...we...think, see, hear, and distinguish the
    ugly from the beautiful, the bad from the good,
    the pleasant from the unpleasant.

13
Brain-based explanations
  • The mind is explained in terms of physical
    processes in the brain. (pace Aristotle)
  • What about Dualism?
  • Dualism - The mind is a soul.
  • Not to be decided a priori. Need experiments.
  • BBE is the default hypothesis because it has been
    more successful and has better predictive power.

14
However, the brain is a very, very, very complex
system. (100 billion neurons vs. 6 billion people)
15
Some of the connections between the different
visual systems.
16
How to deal with this complex system?
  • 1. Functional approach
  • Understand the functions of different systems of
    the brain and see how they interact.
  • Visual areas, language, emotions
  • Cognitive science is like reverse engineering.
  • 2. Inter-disciplinary approach

17
INTERDISCIPLINARY approach
  • Division of labour
  • Psychology cognitive psychology, developmental
    psychology
  • Linguistics syntax, semantics, phonology
  • Neuroscience brain structures, localization
  • Computer science AI, computer models
  • Philosophy theoretical foundations

18
The computer model of the mind
  • The mind is like a computer.
  • A distinctive feature of cognitive science.

19
What is the computer model?
  • The mind is an information processing system.
  • Information processing is best explained by
    computations and symbols.
  • Information processing in the computer programs
    operating on symbols.
  • Information processing in the brain neural
    computations involving mental representations.

20
A typical computer
  • Inside a computer, we have
  • Symbolse.g. HTML color codessymbols are
    objects to which meaning can be assigned.
  • Programse.g. Str_replace( I have a cat , c ,
    h )programs are procedures for manipulating
    symbols.

21
Mental representations
  • Mental representations are symbols in the brain
    that have meaning or encode information.
  • Thinking P Activating a mental representation
    that means P.

22
Thinking as neural computation
Is-in-love
Peter
Is-happy
23
Why should we accept the computational model of
the mind?
24
Some reasons
  • Information processing does seem to be a
    distinctive feature of the mind.
  • Mental representations are useful in explaining
    lots of mental phenomena.
  • We can observe mental representations.

25
Information processing in the mind
  • Perception
  • acquiring real-time information about the
    surrounding environment.
  • Language use
  • making use of information about syntax, semantics
    and phonology.
  • Reasoning
  • combining different sources of information,
    deriving new information, testing consistency of
    information, etc.
  • Action
  • making use of information in action planning and
    guidance.
  • Memory
  • storing and retrieving information

26
They help us explain lots of things
  • Example Syntactic Disambiguation
  • We shall discuss violence on TV.
  • Two interpretations

27
A real representation
Topographical representation of visual stimulus
in area V1
28
(No Transcript)
29
Two methodological consequences of the computer
model
  • Computer models can be built to test theories of
    mental processes.
  • There are different levels of analysis for a
    complex information processing system.

30
Three Levels of Description (David Marr)
  • A complete understanding of a computational
    system has to involve three (kinds of) levels
  • Task what the system is capable of doing
    (capacities)
  • Algorithm (software) which computational
    procedures are used
  • Implementation (hardware) how the computations
    are implemented

31
Example
1 2 3 4 5
2 4 6 8 10
3 6 9 12 15
4 8 12 16 20
5 10 15 20 25
  • Task Multiplication
  • Algorithm input numbers x and y. Output number
    in row x and column y.
  • Implementation human being and paper.

32
Different algorithmsSame task
  • Task calculate X2-1
  • Algorithm 1 X2-1 (X1)(X-1)
  • 52-1 (51)(5-1) 64 24
  • Algorithm 2 X2-1 XX-1
  • 52-1 (55)-125-124

33
Same taskDifferent hardware implementations
1 2 3 4 5
2 4 6 8 10
3 6 9 12 15
4 8 12 16 20
5 10 15 20 25
Exercise Can you give an example where the same
algorithm is implemented in different hardware?
34
Application linguistic understanding
  • Task
  • Identify grammatical structure and meaning of
    speech sounds.
  • Algorithm
  • What kind of computation and mental
    representations?
  • Implementation
  • Which part of the brain?

35
How to think about cognitive science
Language Vision Reasoning Other areas
Task
Algorithm
Hardware
36
If you get lost
  • Which mental process?
  • Language, reasoning, emotions,
  • Which level?
  • Task, algorithm, neural implementation

37
Summary
  • Cognitive science as an inter-disciplinary
    science of mind and behavior.
  • The computational approach using computations
    and representations to explain mental processes.
  • Three levels of descriptions.

38
Finally, to end
39
Scope of the computer model?
  • Computations are NECESSARY for understanding the
    mind because the mind processes information.
  • Are computations SUFFICIENT for understanding
    everything about the mind?
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