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Stephen Grossberg

Boston University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    66
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    31

 More details
  • Boston University
    Regular Faculty
Homepage
Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  • All publications (66)
  •  105
    Competitive Learning: From Interactive Activation to Adaptive Resonance
    Cognitive Science 11 (1): 23-63. 1987.
  •  61
    Processing of expected and unexpected events during conditioning and attention: A psychophysiological theory
    Psychological Review 89 (5): 529-572. 1982.
    Philosophy of Psychology
  •  80
    Binocular fusion and invariant category learning due to predictive remapping during scanning of a depthful scene with eye movements
    with Karthik Srinivasan and Arash Yazdanbakhsh
    Frontiers in Psychology 5. 2014.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  •  47
    Neural dynamics of word recognition and recall: Attentional priming, learning, and resonance
    with Gregory Stone
    Psychological Review 93 (1): 46-74. 1986.
    Unconscious and Conscious Processes
  •  1687
    Depth perception from pairs of overlapping cues in pictorial displays
    with Birgitta Dresp and Severine Durand
    Spatial Vision 15 255-276. 2002.
    The experiments reported herein probe the visual cortical mechanisms that control near–far percepts in response to two-dimensional stimuli. Figural contrast is found to be a principal factor for the emergence of percepts of near versus far in pictorial stimuli, especially when stimulus duration is brief. Pictorial factors such as interposition (Experiment 1) and partial occlusion Experiments 2 and 3) may cooperate, as generally predicted by cue combination models, or compete with contrast factor…Read more
    The experiments reported herein probe the visual cortical mechanisms that control near–far percepts in response to two-dimensional stimuli. Figural contrast is found to be a principal factor for the emergence of percepts of near versus far in pictorial stimuli, especially when stimulus duration is brief. Pictorial factors such as interposition (Experiment 1) and partial occlusion Experiments 2 and 3) may cooperate, as generally predicted by cue combination models, or compete with contrast factors in the manner predicted by the FACADE model. In particular, if the geometrical conŽ guration of an image favors activation of cortical bipole grouping cells, as at the top of a T-junction, then this advantage can cooperate with the contrast of the conŽ guration to facilitate a near–far percept at a lower contrast than at an X-junction. Varying the exposure duration of the stimuli shows that the more balanced bipole competition in the X-junction case takes longer exposure times to resolve than the bipole competition in the T-junction case (Experiment 3).
    Psychology
  •  148
    Localist but distributed representations
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (4): 478-479. 2000.
    A number of examples are given of how localist models may incorporate distributed representations, without the types of nonlocal interactions that often render distributed models implausible. The need to analyze the information that is encoded by these representations is also emphasized as a metatheoretical constraint on model plausibility.
    Philosophy of Cognitive ScienceNeural Networks and Connectionism
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