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88Subjective Time: The Philosophy, Psychology, and Neuroscience of Temporality (edited book)MIT Press. 2014.
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8Not Dead Yet: Fragility and Phenomenology in a Time of PlagueConstructivist Foundations 16 (3): 253-255. 2021.One manifestation of fragility in the pandemic era is the fragility of social systems, and especially the revealed instability of science and other forms of understanding, when opposed to the …
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22Comparison of the Video Game Functional Assessment-Revised (VGFA-R) and Internet Gaming Disorder Test (IGD-20)Frontiers in Psychology 10 409122. 2019.
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40Protention and Predictive Processing: The Wave of the FutureConstructivist Foundations 13 (1): 98-99. 2017.Gallagher’s main claim can be enhanced neurophenomenologically. In his 1907 lectures Thing and Space, Husserl argued that perception in general is enactive. Moreover, the neuroscientific theory of predictive processing connects neatly to a future-oriented phenomenology.
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Unity, association, and dissociation of temporal consciousness in recurrent neural networksConsciousness and Cognition 9 (2). 2000.
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11Time after timeIn Shimon Edelman, Tomer Fekete & Neta Zach (eds.), Being in Time: Dynamical Models of Phenomenal Experience, John Benjamins. pp. 88--1. 2012.
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24The limits of cognitive liberalismBehaviorism 14 (1): 1-14. 1986.The central characteristic of cognitive explanations of behavior is the appeal to inner representations. I examine the grounds which justify representational explanations, seeking the minimum conditions which organisms must meet to be candidates for such explanations. I first discuss Fodor's proposal that representationality be attributed to systems which respond to nonnomic properties, arguing that the distinction between the nomic and nonnomic in perception is fatally ambiguous. Then I turn to…Read more
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53Radiant Cool: A Novel Theory of ConsciousnessMIT Press. 2004.An innovative theory of consciousness, drawing on the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl and supported by brain-imaging, presented in the form of a hardboiled ..
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23Loose connections: Four problems in Searie's argument for the “Connection Principle”Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (4): 615-616. 1990.
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2Civil schizophreniaIn Don Ross, David Spurrett, Harold Kincaid & G. Lynn Stephens (eds.), Distributed Cognition and the Will: Individual Volition and Social Context, Mit Press. pp. 323. 2007.
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40Consciousness, connectionism, and cognitive neuroscience: A meeting of the mindsPhilosophical Psychology 9 (1): 61-78. 1996.Accounting for phenomenal structure—the forms, aspects, and features of conscious experience—poses a deep challenge for the scientific study of consciousness, but rather than abandon hope I propose a way forward. Connectionism, I argue, offers a bi-directional analogy, with its oft-noted “neural inspiration” on the one hand, and its largely unnoticed capacity to illuminate our phenomenology on the other. Specifically, distributed representations in a recurrent network enable networks to superpos…Read more
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74The Music of Consciousness: Can Musical Form Harmonize Phenomenology and the Brain?Constructivist Foundations 8 (3): 324-331. 2013.Context: Neurophenomenology lies at a rich intersection of neuroscience and lived human experience, as described by phenomenology. As a new discipline, it is open to many new questions, methods, and proposals. Problem: The best available scientific ontology for neurophenomenology is based in dynamical systems. However, dynamical systems afford myriad strategies for organizing and representing neurodynamics, just as phenomenology presents an array of aspects of experience to be captured. Here, th…Read more
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78Simple MindsMIT Press. 1989.Drawing on philosophy, neuroscience, and artificial intelligence, Simple Minds explores the construction of the mind from the matter of the brain.
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9Many times over: A brief reply to Lee and KlincewiczConsciousness and Cognition 21 (2): 711-712. 2012.
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140Functional MRI and the study of human consciousnessJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience 14 (6): 818-831. 2002.& Functional brain imaging offers new opportunities for the begin with single-subject (preprocessed) scan series, and study of that most pervasive of cognitive conditions, human consider the patterns of all voxels as potential multivariate consciousness. Since consciousness is attendant to so much encodings of phenomenal information. Twenty-seven subjects of human cognitive life, its study requires secondary analysis from the four studies were analyzed with multivariate of multiple experimental …Read more
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35Consciousness: Only introspective hindsight?Behavioral and Brain Sciences 14 (4): 686-687. 1991.
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80Beyond “the Fringe”: A Cautionary Critique of William JamesConsciousness and Cognition 9 (4): 629-637. 2000.
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28Psychosemantics: The Problem of Meaning in the Philosophy of MindPhilosophical Review 100 (2): 289. 1991.
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40Leaping to conclusions: Connectionism, consciousness, and the computational mindIn Terence E. Horgan & John L. Tienson (eds.), Connectionism and the Philosophy of Mind, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 444--459. 1991.
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Cognitive Science |