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212The Time-Course of Sentence Meaning Composition. N400 Effects of the Interaction between Context-Induced and Lexically Stored AffordancesFrontiers in Psychology 8 248173. 2017.Contemporary semantic theories can be classified along two dimensions: (i) the way and time-course in which contextual factors influence sentence truth-conditions; and (ii) whether and to what extent comprehension involves sensory, motor and emotional processes. In order to explore this theoretical space, our ERP study investigates the time-course of the interaction between the lexically specified telic component of a noun (the function of the object to which the noun refers to, e.g., a funnel i…Read more
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102Doing without metarepresentation: Scenario construction explains the epistemic generativity and privileged status of episodic memoryBehavioral and Brain Sciences 41. 2018.
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122Synchrony and composition: Toward a cognitive architecture between classicism and connectionismIn Benedikt Löwe, Thoralf Räsch & Wolfgang Malzkorn (eds.), Foundations of the Formal Sciences II, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 261--278. 2003.
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679Conceptual fingerprints: Lexical decomposition by means of frames – a neuro-cognitive modelIn U. Priss, S. Polovina & R. Hill (eds.), Conceptual structures: Knowledge architectures for smart applications, . 2007.Frames, i.e., recursive attribute-value structures, are a general format for the decomposition of lexical concepts. Attributes assign unique values to objects and thus describe functional relations. Concepts can be classified into four groups: sortal, individual, relational and functional concepts. The classification is reflected by different grammatical roles of the corresponding nouns. The paper aims at a cognitively adequate decomposition, particularly, of sortal concepts by means of frames. …Read more
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292What is episodic memory if it is a natural kind?Synthese 193 (5): 1345-1385. 2016.Colloquially, episodic memory is described as “the memory of personally experienced events”. Even though episodic memory has been studied in psychology and neuroscience for about six decades, there is still great uncertainty as to what episodic memory is. Here we ask how episodic memory should be characterized in order to be validated as a natural kind. We propose to conceive of episodic memory as a knowledge-like state that is identified with an experientially based mnemonic representation of a…Read more
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187The Oxford Handbook of CompositionalityOxford University Press. 2012.Leading linguists and philosophers report on all aspects of compositionality, the notion that the meaning of an expression can be derived from its parts. This book explores every dimension of this field, reporting critically on different lines of research, revealing connections between them, and highlighting current problems and opportunities.
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52High- vs Low-Level Cognition and the Neuro- Emulative Theory of Mental RepresentationIn Ulrich Gähde, Stephan Hartmann & Jörn Henning Wolf (eds.), Models, Simulations, and the Reduction of Complexity, De Gruyter. pp. 141-152. 2013.
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26The “complex first” paradoxIn M. Arbib D. Bickerton (ed.), The Emergence of Protolanguage: Holophrasis Vs Compositionality, John Benjamins. pp. 24--67. 2010.
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216Complex First? On the Evolutionary and Developmental Priority of Semantically Thick WordsPhilosophy of Science 77 (5): 1096-1108. 2010.The Complex-First Paradox consists in a set of collectively incompatible but individually well-confirmed propositions that regard the evolution, development, and cortical realization of the meanings of concrete nouns. Although these meanings are acquired earlier than those of other word classes, they are semantically more complex and their cortical realizations more widely distributed. For a neurally implemented syntaxsemantics interface, it should thus take more effort to establish a link betwe…Read more
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Lexicon in action: N400 effect on affordances and telicityIn D. C. Noelle, R. Dale, Anne Warlaumont, Jeffrey Yoshimi, T. Matlock, C. D. Jennings & P. P. Maglio (eds.), Proceedings of the 37th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Cognitive Science Society. pp. 2079-84. 2015.
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349The temporal dimension of thought: Cortical foundations of predicative representationSynthese 146 (1-2): 203-224. 2005.The paper argues that cognitive states of biological systems are inherently temporal. Three adequacy conditions for neuronal models of representation are vindicated: the compositionality of meaning, the compositionality of content, and the co-variation with content. Classicist and connectionist approaches are discussed and rejected. Based on recent neurobiological data, oscillatory networks are introduced as a third alternative. A mathematical description in a Hilbert space framework is develope…Read more
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98Non-symbolic compositional representation and its neuronal foundation: towards an emulative semanticsIn Markus Werning, Wolfram Hinzen & Edouard Machery (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Compositionality, Oxford University Press. 2012.This article proposes a neurobiologically motivated theory of meaning as internal representation that holds on to the principle of compositionality, but negates the principle of semantic constituency. The approach builds on neurobiological findings regarding topologically structured cortical feature maps and the mechanism of object-related binding by neuronal synchronization. It incorporates the Gestalt principles of psychology and is implemented by recurrent neural networks. The semantics to be…Read more
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94Applications to Linguistics, Psychology and Neuroscience (edited book)De Gruyter. 2005.The second volume is devoted to issues of compositionality that arouse in the sciences of language, the investigation of the mind, and the modeling of representational brain functions. How could compositional languages evolve? How many sentences are needed to learn a compositional language? How does compositionality relate to the interpretation of texts, the generation of idioms and metaphors, and the understanding of aberrant expressions? What psychological mechanism underlies the combination o…Read more
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189The “complex first” paradox: Why do semantically thick concepts so early lexicalize as nouns?Interaction Studies 9 (1): 67-83. 2008.
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220Descartes discarded? Introspective self-awareness and the problems of transparency and compositionality☆Consciousness and Cognition 19 (3): 751-761. 2010.What has the self to be like such that introspective awareness of it is possible? The paper asks if Descartes’s idea of an inner self can be upheld and discusses this issue by invoking two principles: the phenomenal transparency of experience and the semantic compositionality of conceptual content. It is assumed that self-awareness is a second-order state either in the domain of experience or in the domain of thought. In the former case self-awareness turns out empty if experience is transparent…Read more
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761We defend a realistic attitude towards biological species. We argue that two species are not different species because they differ in intrinsic features, be they phenotypic or genomic, but because they are separated with regard to gene flow. There are no intrinsic species essences. However, there are relational ones. We argue that bearing a gene flow relation to conspecifics may serve as the essence of a species. Our view of the species as a Gene-Flow Community differs from Mayr’s definition of …Read more
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232Ventral versus dorsal pathway: The source of the semantic object/event and the syntactic noun/verb distinction?Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (3): 299-300. 2003.Experimental data suggest that the division between the visual ventral and dorsal pathways may indeed indicate that static and dynamical information is processed separately. Contrary to Hurford, it is suggested that the ventral pathway primarily generates representations of objects, whereas the dorsal pathway produces representations of events. The semantic object/event distinction may relate to the morpho-syntactic noun/verb distinction.
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40Neuronal Synchronization, Covariation, and Compositional RepresentationIn Markus Werning, Edouard Machery & Gerhard Schurz (eds.), Applications to Linguistics, Psychology and Neuroscience, De Gruyter. pp. 283-312. 2005.
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295Compositionality, context, categories and the indeterminacy of translationErkenntnis 60 (2): 145-178. 2004.The doctrine that meanings are entitieswith a determinate and independent reality is often believed tohave been undermined by Quine's thought experiment of radicaltranslation, which results in an argument for the indeterminacy oftranslation. This paper argues to the contrary. Starting fromQuine's assumption that the meanings of observation sentences arestimulus meanings, i.e., set-theoretical constructions of neuronalstates uniquely determined by inter-subjectively observable facts,the paper sho…Read more
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108Composition and replay of mnemonic sequences: The contributions of REM and slow-wave sleep to episodic memoryBehavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (6): 610-611. 2013.We propose that rapid eye movement (REM) and slow-wave sleep contribute differently to the formation of episodic memories. REM sleep is important for building up invariant object representations that eventually recur to gamma-band oscillations in the neocortex. In contrast, slow-wave sleep is more directly involved in the consolidation of episodic memories through replay of sequential neural activity in hippocampal place cells.
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121The evolutionary and social preference for knowledge: How to solve meno’s problem within reliabilismGrazer Philosophische Studien 79 (1): 137-156. 2009.This paper addresses various solutions to Meno's Problem: Why is it that knowledge is more valuable than merely true belief? Given both a pragmatist as well as a veritist understanding of epistemic value, it is argued that a reliabilist analysis of knowledge, in general, promises a hopeful strategy to explain the extra value of knowledge. It is, however, shown that two recent attempts to solve Meno's Problem within reliabilism are severely flawed: Olsson's conditional probability solution and Go…Read more
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60How to Compose Contents A Review of Jerry Fodor's In Critical Condition: Polemical Essays on Cognitive Science and the Philosophy of MindPSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 8. 2002.The paper critically reviews Jerry Fodor's book In Critical Condition: Polemic Essays on Cognitive Science and the Philosophy of Mind. It focuses on Fodor's compositionality arguments and their relevance to the following questions: How should concepts be individuated? What has semantics to do with epistemology? Who is right in the debate over classical and connectionist theories of cognition? How can the semantic properties of a mental state be inherited from the semantic properties of the state…Read more