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108Brain feedback and adaptive resonance in speech perceptionBehavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (3): 332-333. 2000.The brain contains ubiquitous reciprocal bottom-up and top-down intercortical and thalamocortical pathways. These resonating feedback pathways may be essential for stable learning of speech and language codes and for context-sensitive selection and completion of noisy speech sounds and word groupings. Context-sensitive speech data, notably interword backward effects in time, have been quantitatively modeled using these concepts but not with purely feedforward models.
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62Neural dynamics of decision making under risk: Affective balance and cognitive-emotional interactionsPsychological Review 94 (3): 300-318. 1987.
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Adaptative Resonance TheoryIn Michael A. Arbib (ed.), The Handbook of Brain Theory and Neural Networks, Second Edition, Mit Press. pp. 87. 2002.
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67Interdisciplinary aspects of perceptual dynamicsBehavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (4): 676-692. 1983.
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112The quantized geometry of visual space: The coherent computation of depth, form, and lightnessBehavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (4): 625-657. 1983.A theory is presented of how global visual interactions between depth, length, lightness, and form percepts can occur. The theory suggests how quantized activity patterns which reflect these visual properties can coherently fill-in, or complete, visually ambiguous regions starting with visually informative data features. Phenomena such as the Cornsweet and Craik–O'Brien effects, phantoms and subjective contours, binocular brightness summation, the equidistance tendency, Emmert's law, allelotropi…Read more
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Boston UniversityRegular Faculty
Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Cognitive Science |