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190
Why there are Complementary Learning Systems in the Hippocampus and Neocortex: Insights from the Successes and Failures of Connectionist Models of Learning and Memory
, 1994
"... The influence of prior experience on some forms of behavior and cognition is drastically affected by damage to the hippocampal system. However, if the hippocampal system is left intact both during the experience and for a period of time thereafter, subsequent damage can have much less or even no eff ..."
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Cited by 288 (34 self)
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The influence of prior experience on some forms of behavior and cognition is drastically affected by damage to the hippocampal system. However, if the hippocampal system is left intact both during the experience and for a period of time thereafter, subsequent damage can have much less or even no effect. Such findings suggest that memory traces change over time in a way that makes them less dependent on the hippocampal system. This process of change has often been called consolidation. Consolidation is a very gradual process; in humans, it appears to span up to 15 years. This article asks what consolidation is and why it occurs. We take as our point of departure the view that the initial memory trace that results from a relevant experience consists of changes to the strengths of the connections among neurons in the hippocampal system. Bidirectional connections between the neocortex and the hippocampus allow these initial traces to mediate the reinstatement of representations of events o...
From Simple Associations to Systematic Reasoning: a Connectionist Representation of Rules, Variables and Dynamic Bindings Using Temporal Synchrony
- Behavioral and Brain Sciences
, 1993
"... Abstract: Human agents draw a variety of inferences effortlessly, spontaneously, and with remarkable efficiency — as though these inferences are a reflex response of their cognitive apparatus. Furthermore, these inferences are drawn with reference to a large body of background knowledge. This remark ..."
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Cited by 200 (28 self)
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Abstract: Human agents draw a variety of inferences effortlessly, spontaneously, and with remarkable efficiency — as though these inferences are a reflex response of their cognitive apparatus. Furthermore, these inferences are drawn with reference to a large body of background knowledge. This remarkable human ability seems paradoxical given the results about the complexity of reasoning reported by researchers in artificial intelligence. It also poses a challenge for cognitive science and computational neuroscience: How can a system of simple and slow neuron-like elements represent a large body of systematic knowledge and perform a range of inferences with such speed? We describe a computational model that is a step toward addressing the cognitive science challenge and resolving the artificial intelligence paradox. We show how a connectionist network can encode millions of facts and rules involving n-ary predicates and variables, and perform a class of inferences in a few hundred msec. Efficient reasoning requires the rapid representation and propagation of dynamic bindings. Our model achieves this by i) representing dynamic bindings as the synchronous firing of appropriate nodes, ii) rules as interconnection patterns
"Forget-me-not" Intimate Computing in Support of Human Memory
, 1994
"... At RXRC we have been trying to understand how anticipated developments in mobile computing will impact our customers in the 21st century. One opportunity we can see is to improve computer-based support for human memory --- ironically a problem in office systems research that has almost been forgot ..."
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Cited by 174 (2 self)
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At RXRC we have been trying to understand how anticipated developments in mobile computing will impact our customers in the 21st century. One opportunity we can see is to improve computer-based support for human memory --- ironically a problem in office systems research that has almost been forgotten. Considering how often computers are presented as devices capable of "memorising" vast quantities of information, and performing difficult-tomemorise sequences of operations on our behalf, we might be surprised at how often they appear to have increased the load on our own memory. The Forget-me-not project is an attempt to explore new ways in which mobile and ubiquitous technologies might help alleviate the increasing load. Forget-me-not is a memory aid designed to help with everyday memory problems: finding a lost document, remembering somebody 's name, recalling how to operate a piece of machinery. It exploits some well understood features of human episodic memory to provid
The empirical case for two systems of reasoning
- Psychological Bulletin
, 1996
"... Distinctions have been proposed between systems of reasoning for centuries. This article distills properties shared by many of these distinctions and characterizes the resulting systems in light of recent findings and theoretical developments. One system is associative because its computations refle ..."
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Cited by 172 (3 self)
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Distinctions have been proposed between systems of reasoning for centuries. This article distills properties shared by many of these distinctions and characterizes the resulting systems in light of recent findings and theoretical developments. One system is associative because its computations reflect similarity structure and relations of temporal contiguity. The other is "rule based " because it operates on symbolic structures that have logical content and variables and because its computations have the properties that are normally assigned to rules. The systems serve complementary functions and can simultaneously generate different solutions to a reasoning problem. The rule-based system can suppress the associative system but not completely inhibit it. The article reviews evidence in favor of the distinction and its characterization. One of the oldest conundrums in psychology is whether people are best conceived as parallel processors of information who operate along diffuse associative links or as analysts who operate by deliberate and sequential manipulation of internal representations. Are inferences drawn through a network of learned associative pathways or through application of a kind of "psychologic"
The Wearable Remembrance Agent: A System for Augmented Memory
- Personal Technologies
, 1997
"... This paper describes the wearable Remembrance Agent, a continuously running proactive memory aid that uses the physical context of a wearable computer to provide notes that might be relevant in that context. A currently running prototype is described, along with future directions for research inspir ..."
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Cited by 126 (5 self)
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This paper describes the wearable Remembrance Agent, a continuously running proactive memory aid that uses the physical context of a wearable computer to provide notes that might be relevant in that context. A currently running prototype is described, along with future directions for research inspired by using the prototype. 1 Introduction With computer chips getting smaller and cheaper the day will soon come when the desk-top, lap-top, and palm-top computer will all disappear into a vest pocket, wallet, shoe, or anywhere else a spare centimeter or two are available. As the price continues to plummet, these devices will enable all kinds of applications, from consumer electronics to personal communicators to field-operations support. Given that the primary use of today's palm-top computers is as day-planners, address books, and notebooks, one can expect memory aids will be an important application for wearable computers as well. Current computer-based memory aids are written to make l...
Double Dissociation Without Modularity: Evidence from Connectionist Neuropsychology
- Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology
, 1995
"... Many theorists assume that the cognitive system is composed of a collection of encapsulated processing components or modules, each dedicated to performing a particular cognitive function. On this view, selective impairments of cognitive tasks following brain damage, as evidenced by double dissociati ..."
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Cited by 60 (15 self)
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Many theorists assume that the cognitive system is composed of a collection of encapsulated processing components or modules, each dedicated to performing a particular cognitive function. On this view, selective impairments of cognitive tasks following brain damage, as evidenced by double dissociations, are naturally interpreted in terms of the loss of particular processing components. By contrast, the current investigation examines in detail a double dissociation between concrete and abstract word reading after damage to a connectionist network that pronounces words via meaning and yet has no separable components (Plaut & Shallice, 1993). The functional specialization in the network that gives rise to the double dissociation is not transparently related to the network's structure, as modular theories assume. Furthermore, a consideration of the distribution of effects across quantitatively equivalent individual lesions in the network raises specific concerns about the interpretation of...
Advances in SHRUTI - A neurally motivated model of relational knowledge representation and rapid inference using temporal synchrony
- Applied Intelligence
, 1999
"... We are capable of drawing a variety of inferences effortlessly, spontaneously, and with remarkable efficiency — as though these inferences are a reflex response of our cognitive apparatus. This remarkable human ability poses a challenge for cognitive science and computational neuroscience: How can a ..."
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Cited by 50 (15 self)
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We are capable of drawing a variety of inferences effortlessly, spontaneously, and with remarkable efficiency — as though these inferences are a reflex response of our cognitive apparatus. This remarkable human ability poses a challenge for cognitive science and computational neuroscience: How can a network of slow neuron-like elements represent a large body of systematic knowledge and perform a wide range of inferences with such speed? The connectionist model Shruti attempts to address this challenge by demonstrating how a neurally plausible network can encode a large body of semantic and episodic facts, systematic rules, and knowledge about entities and types, and yet perform a wide range of explanatory and predictive inferences within a few hundred milliseconds. Relational structures (frames, schemas) are represented in Shruti by clusters of cells, and inference in Shruti corresponds to a transient propagation of rhythmic activity over such cell-clusters wherein dynamic bindings are represented by the synchronous firing of appropriate cells. Shruti encodes mappings across relational structures using high-efficacy links that enable the propagation of rhythmic activity, and it encodes items in long-term memory as coincidence and conincidence-error detector circuits that become active in response to the occurrence (or non-occurrence) of appropriate coincidences in the on going flux of rhythmic activity.
A gentle introduction to Soar, an architecture for human cognition
- In S. Sternberg & D. Scarborough (Eds), Invitation to Cognitive Science
, 1996
"... Many intellectual disciplines contribute to the field of cognitive science: psychology, linguistics, anthropology, and artificial intelligence, to name just a few. Cognitive science itself ..."
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Cited by 48 (4 self)
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Many intellectual disciplines contribute to the field of cognitive science: psychology, linguistics, anthropology, and artificial intelligence, to name just a few. Cognitive science itself
Oscillator-based memory for serial order
- Psychological Review
, 2000
"... A computational model of human memory for serial order is described (OSCillator-based Associative Recall [OSCAR]). In the model, successive list items become associated to successive states of a dynamic learning-context signal. Retrieval involves reinstatement of the learning context, successive sta ..."
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Cited by 43 (1 self)
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A computational model of human memory for serial order is described (OSCillator-based Associative Recall [OSCAR]). In the model, successive list items become associated to successive states of a dynamic learning-context signal. Retrieval involves reinstatement of the learning context, successive states of which cue successive recalls. The model provides an integrated account of both item memory and order memory and allows the hierarchical representation of temporal order information. The model accounts for a wide range of serial order memory data, including differential item and order memory, transposition gradients, item similarity effects, the effects of item lag and separation in judgments of relative and absolute recency, probed serial recall data, distinctiveness effects, grouping effects at various temporal resolutions, longer term memory for serial order, list length effects, and the effects of vocabulary size on serial recall. The serial ordering of behavior is central to much, perhaps most, of human cognition (e.g., Lashley, 1951). Studies of memory for serial order have provided rich data on the psychological repre-sentation of serial order information and therefore offer a signifi-cant challenge to any model of serially ordered behavior. In this

