chapter 2: modeling mental imagery. cognitive science josé luis bermúdez / cambridge university...

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Chapter 2: Modeling mental imagery

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Chapter 2:Modeling mental imagery

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

The ingredients

•Encountered some of the basic ideas feeding into cognitive science

• move away from associationist models of learning and behavior

• information theory as a tool for exploring the nature and limits of cognitive abilities

• development of “boxological” accounts of how cognitive tasks can be performed

• theory of computation as a model for information-processing

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Putting them together: 3 case studies

• Terry Winograd and SHRDLU [TODAY]

• The imagery debate [MONDAY]

• Marr’s theory of vision [WEDNESDAY]

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Earlier themes

•The nature of mental representation

– Miller and chunking information-processing depends on how information is coded

– Winograd and procedural semantics representation of “knowledge” in terms of algorithmic routines

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Common assumptions about information

•Information is amodal

• Miller’s suggestion that the sensory systems all have the same channel capacity

•Information is coded in a digital/propositional format

• based on the formal languages used to program computers

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Digital information-coding

•Information is coded in a format that has the basic properties of a language

• Basic constituents are individual symbols

• Compositionality – complex structures are built up from individual symbols according to formation rules

• Arbitrary connections between symbolic structures and what they represent

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Digital information-processing

•The model for thinking about digital information-processing are formal languages (e.g. logical languages and computer programming languages)

•Model information-processing on, e.g.

• proofs in logical languages

• implementation of instructions in a production system

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Imagistic information-coding

•Non-symbolic: images are not built up from basic elements

•Not compositional

• The parts of images cannot reoccur in other images

• No rules for building up images from their parts

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Representation in images

•Representation depends upon systematic correlation between properties of representation and properties of what it represents

• pictorial depiction depends upon resemblance

• can be schematic resemblance, as in a map

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Tricky issues

•Imagistic representations can exploit symbols (e.g. maps)• need to distinguish between the representation

and the labeling of the representation

•Imagistic representations ≠ analog representations• a representation is analog just if it permits

continuous variation• there are examples of analog representartions

that are not imagistic and imagistic representations that are not analog

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Imagistic information-processing

•The real issue comes with how information is extracted from imagistic representations

• scanning images

• manipulating images (e.g. rotation)

•Certain types of information are much easier to extract from images than from digital representations

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

The issues for cognitive science

•Is information always encoded in a digital format - or are there cases of imagistically encoded information?

•How can we explore this experimentally?

• By looking at how subjects carry out information-processing tasks involving images

• Seeing whether their behavior provides indirect evidence that they are scanning/manipulating images

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Brooks 1968

F• Form a memory image of a capital F• Trace around the image, starting at the bottom left corner and working clockwise• Indicate for each corner whether it is on a top edge of the figure

• Performance is impaired when responses are made visually (i.e. by pointing to the word ‘Yes’), rather than by saying ‘yes’

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Cooper 1975

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Scanning mental images

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

The strong interpretation

• Subjects perform the task by rotating/scanning mental images in their “mind’s eye”

• The process of mental rotation/scanning has is structurally similar to physical processes of rotation/scanning

• Seems to match evidence from introspection

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Problems with the strong interpretation

• Dennett’s “Cartesian theatre”

• Who or what is doing the scanning/rotating?

• Where is the image projected?

• Threat of regress if we take the metaphor of the “mind’s eye” literally

• Not clear how these mental images relate to “phenomenal images”

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Kosslyn’s theory

• Develops metaphor of images as spatial displays on cathode ray tube

• Mental images are temporarily generated from propositionally encoded information in long-term memory

• Mental images “projected” onto visual buffer (which is where perceptual representations also appear)

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Solving a problem

Cognitive Science José Luis Bermúdez / Cambridge University Press 2010

Ambiguity

• Personal-level phenomena• phenomenal images• conscious experience of the world• accessible to introspection (not always reliable)

• Subpersonal information-processing explains our personal-level phenomena and abilities