The informed neuron: Issues in the use of information theory in the behavioral sciences |
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Authors: | Jeff Coulter |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Sociology, Boston University, 02215 Boston, MA, USA |
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Abstract: | The concept of information is virtually ubiquitous in contemporary cognitive science. It is claimed to be processed (in cognitivist theories of perception and comprehension), stored (in cognitivist theories of memory and recognition), and otherwise manipulated and transformed by the human central nervous system. Fred Dretske's extensive philosophical defense of a theory of informational content ( semantic information) based upon the Shannon-Weaver formal theory of information is subjected to critical scrutiny. A major difficulty is identified in Dretske's equivocations in the use of the concept of a signal bearing informational content. Gibson's alternative conception of information (construed as analog by Dretske), while avoiding many of the problems located in the conventional use of signal , raises different but equally serious questions. It is proposed that, taken literally, the human CNS does not extract or process information at all; rather, whatever information is construed as locatable in the CNS is information only for an observer-theorist and only for certain purposes. Blood courses through our veins, andinformation through our central nervous system .— A Neuropsychology Textbook. |
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Keywords: | Cognition computation information-processing information-extraction knowledge belief vision signal intelligibility |
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