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Jonathan Cohen

University of South Carolina
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    40
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    6

 More details
  • University of South Carolina
    Department of Philosophy
    Post-doctoral fellow
Columbia, South Carolina, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Religion
Aesthetics
19th Century Philosophy
20th Century Philosophy
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
2 more
  • All publications (40)
  •  53
    Adapting to loss: A computational model of grief
    with Zack Dulberg and Rachit Dubey
    Psychological Review 133 (3): 737-752. 2026.
    Philosophy of Psychology
  • For the law, neuroscience changes nothing and everything
    with Joshua Greene
    In Semir Zeki & Oliver Goodenough (eds.), Law and the Brain, Oxford University Press. 2006.
  • Time discounting for primary rewards
    with Samuel McClure, Keith Ericson, David Laibson, and George Loewenstein
    Journal of Neuroscience 27 (21). 2007.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  • The expected value of control: an integrative theory of anterior cingulate cortex function
    with Amitai Shenhav and Matthew Botvinick
    Neuron 79 (2). 2013.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  •  57
    An integrated model of semantics and control
    with Tyler Giallanza, Declan Campbell, and Timothy T. Rogers
    Psychological Review 132 (5): 1128-1177. 2025.
    Philosophy of Psychology
  • The Empirical Examinability of Psychodynamic Psychotherapy: A Reply to Hoffart and Johnson
    with Ryan McElhaney and D. Jensen
    Clinical Psychological Science 4 (6). 2018.
    This commentary serves as a reply to Hoffart and Johnson’s article contending that psychodynamic psychotherapy (PDT) models cannot be examined with regard to mechanism of change or represent within-person causal relationships. Hoffart and Johnson cite purportedly paradigmatic examples of PDT and cognitive therapy and examine them with respect to Kazdin’s requirements for investigation of mechanisms of change. We highlight inaccuracies in Hoffart and Johnson’s representation of PDT and, in doing …Read more
    This commentary serves as a reply to Hoffart and Johnson’s article contending that psychodynamic psychotherapy (PDT) models cannot be examined with regard to mechanism of change or represent within-person causal relationships. Hoffart and Johnson cite purportedly paradigmatic examples of PDT and cognitive therapy and examine them with respect to Kazdin’s requirements for investigation of mechanisms of change. We highlight inaccuracies in Hoffart and Johnson’s representation of PDT and, in doing so, provide reasoning in support of the empirical examinability of PDT. We conclude by recommending a metatheoretical system (i.e., functionalism) and empirical methodologies that clinical scientists may consider when investigating mechanisms of PDT in the future.
    Mental IllnessPsychotherapyPhilosophy of Psychiatry and Psychopathology, MiscPsychiatry and Psychoth…Read more
    Mental IllnessPsychotherapyPhilosophy of Psychiatry and Psychopathology, MiscPsychiatry and Psychotherapy
  •  32
    Los Angeles, CA, USA
    with Fergus Im Craik, Ieffrey L. Cummings, and Lauren Dade
    In Donald T. Stuss & Robert T. Knight (eds.), Principles of Frontal Lobe Function, Oxford University Press. 2002.
  • The experience of time
    Acta Psychologica 10 207-19. 1954.
    Time and Consciousness in PsychologyExperience of Temporal Passage
  • Molyneux's Question and the History of Philosophy (edited book)
    with Mohan Matthen
    Routledge. 2021.
    Molyneux's Problem
  •  142
    The physics of optimal decision making: A formal analysis of models of performance in two-alternative forced-choice tasks
    with Rafal Bogacz, Eric Brown, Jeff Moehlis, and Philip Holmes
    Psychological Review 113 (4): 700-765. 2006.
    Philosophy of Economics
  •  132
    When working memory may be just working, not memory
    with Andre Beukers, Maia Hamin, and Kenneth A. Norman
    Psychological Review 131 (2): 563-577. 2024.
    Philosophy of PsychologyMemory
  •  322
    Color relationalism and color phenomenology
    In Bence Nanay (ed.), Perceiving the world, Oxford University Press. pp. 13. 2010.
    Color relationalism is the view that colors are constituted in terms of relations between subjects and objects. The most historically important form of color relationalism is the classic dispositionalist view according to which, for example red is the disposition to look red to standard observers in standard conditions (mutatis mutandis for other colors).1 However, it has become increasingly apparent in recent years that a commitment to the relationality of colors bears interest that goes beyond…Read more
    Color relationalism is the view that colors are constituted in terms of relations between subjects and objects. The most historically important form of color relationalism is the classic dispositionalist view according to which, for example red is the disposition to look red to standard observers in standard conditions (mutatis mutandis for other colors).1 However, it has become increasingly apparent in recent years that a commitment to the relationality of colors bears interest that goes beyond dispositionalism (Cohen, 2004; Matthen, 1999, 2001, 2005; Thompson, 1995). Accordingly, it is an important project for those interested in the metaphysics of color to sort through and assess different forms of color relationalism. There is, however, a powerful and general cluster of objections that has been thought by many to amount to a decisive refutation of any and all forms of color relationalism. Although this idea has been developed in a number of ways, the basic thought is that relationalism — qua theory of color — is at odds with the manifest evidence of color phenomenology, and that this clash between theory and data should be resolved by giving up the theory.
    Color ExperienceTheories of Color, Misc
  •  98
    The temporal dynamics of opportunity costs: A normative account of cognitive fatigue and boredom
    with Mayank Agrawal, Marcelo G. Mattar, and Nathaniel D. Daw
    Psychological Review 129 (3): 564-585. 2022.
    Philosophy of Psychology
  • Epiphenomenalism and the notion of causation
    with Sven Walter and B. McLaughlin
    In Martina Fürst, Wolfgang Leopold Gombocz & Christian Hiebaum (eds.), Gehirne und Personen, Ontos. 2008.
    Metaphysics of MindEpiphenomenalism
  •  111
    The Neural Basis of Error Detection: Conflict Monitoring and the Error-Related Negativity
    with Nick Yeung and Matthew M. Botvinick
    Psychological Review 111 (4): 931-959. 2004.
  •  116
    Neural mechanism for the magical number 4: Competitive interactions and nonlinear oscillation
    with Marius Usher, Henk Haarmann, and David Horn
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (1): 151-152. 2001.
    The aim of our commentary is to strengthen Cowan's proposal for an inherent capacity limitation in STM by suggesting a neurobiological mechanism based on competitive networks and nonlinear oscillations that avoids some of the shortcomings of the scheme discussed in the target article (Lisman & Idiart 1995).
    Other Academic AreasRepresentation in Neuroscience
  •  219
    Neuroeconomics: cross-currents in research on decision-making
    with Alan G. Sanfey, George Loewenstein, and Samuel M. McClure
    Trends in Cognitive Sciences 10 (3): 108-116. 2006.
    Philosophy of ConsciousnessNeuroethicsScience of Consciousness, Misc
  •  56
    Amplified selectivity in cognitive processing implements the neural gain model of norepinephrine function
    with Eran Eldar and Yael Niv
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39. 2016.
  •  46
    A PDP approach to set size effects within the Stroop task: Reply to Kanne, Balota, Spieler, and Faust (1998)
    with Marius Usher and James L. McClelland
    Psychological Review 105 (1): 188-194. 1998.
  •  157
    Conflict monitoring and cognitive control
    with Matthew M. Botvinick, Todd S. Braver, Deanna M. Barch, and Cameron S. Carter
    Psychological Review 108 (3): 624-652. 2001.
    Consciousness and Psychology
  •  49
    Human inference in changing environments with temporal structure
    with Arthur Prat-Carrabin, Robert C. Wilson, and Rava Azeredo da Silveira
    Psychological Review 128 (5): 879-912. 2021.
    Philosophy of Psychology
  •  131
    Context Matters: Recovering Human Semantic Structure from Machine Learning Analysis of Large‐Scale Text Corpora
    with Marius Cătălin Iordan, Tyler Giallanza, Cameron T. Ellis, and Nicole M. Beckage
    Cognitive Science 46 (2). 2022.
    Applying machine learning algorithms to automatically infer relationships between concepts from large-scale collections of documents presents a unique opportunity to investigate at scale how human semantic knowledge is organized, how people use it to make fundamental judgments (“How similar are cats and bears?”), and how these judgments depend on the features that describe concepts (e.g., size, furriness). However, efforts to date have exhibited a substantial discrepancy between algorithm predic…Read more
    Applying machine learning algorithms to automatically infer relationships between concepts from large-scale collections of documents presents a unique opportunity to investigate at scale how human semantic knowledge is organized, how people use it to make fundamental judgments (“How similar are cats and bears?”), and how these judgments depend on the features that describe concepts (e.g., size, furriness). However, efforts to date have exhibited a substantial discrepancy between algorithm predictions and human empirical judgments. Here, we introduce a novel approach to generating embeddings for this purpose motivated by the idea that semantic context plays a critical role in human judgment. We leverage this idea by constraining the topic or domain from which documents used for generating embeddings are drawn (e.g., referring to the natural world vs. transportation apparatus). Specifically, we trained state-of-the-art machine learning algorithms using contextually-constrained text corpora (domain-specific subsets of Wikipedia articles, 50+ million words each) and showed that this procedure greatly improved predictions of empirical similarity judgments and feature ratings of contextually relevant concepts. Furthermore, we describe a novel, computationally tractable method for improving predictions of contextually-unconstrained embedding models based on dimensionality reduction of their internal representation to a small number of contextually relevant semantic features. By improving the correspondence between predictions derived automatically by machine learning methods using vast amounts of data and more limited, but direct empirical measurements of human judgments, our approach may help leverage the availability of online corpora to better understand the structure of human semantic representations and how people make judgments based on those.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  •  45
    On the presuppositional behavior of coherence-driven pragmatic enrichments
    with Andrew Kehler
    Semantics and Linguistic Theory 26 961-979. 2016.
    When interpreting a sentence such as Every time the company fires an employee who comes in late, a union complaint is lodged, an addressee is likely to infer that the union will only complain when an employee is fired because he came in late. One is thus led to ask why a purely pragmatic enrichment of this sort -- one drawn despite no risk of interpretative failure nor other linguistic mandate -- would intrude upon truth conditions. We argue that this effect results from the interaction among th…Read more
    When interpreting a sentence such as Every time the company fires an employee who comes in late, a union complaint is lodged, an addressee is likely to infer that the union will only complain when an employee is fired because he came in late. One is thus led to ask why a purely pragmatic enrichment of this sort -- one drawn despite no risk of interpretative failure nor other linguistic mandate -- would intrude upon truth conditions. We argue that this effect results from the interaction among three pragmatic phenomena: presupposition, the associative mechanisms that underlie the establishment of coherence in discourse, and the calculation of domain restriction for quantificational operators. Because the analysis does not consider the operative enrichments to be species of implicature, we claim that such cases do not represent an intrusion of implicature into truth-conditional content. Instead, they merely involve the context-dependent determination of quantificational domains.
    PresuppositionImplicature, MiscDiscourse Coherence
  •  129
    An Integrative Theory of Prefrontal Cortex Function
    with Earl K. Miller
    Annual Review of Neuroscience 24 (1): 167-202. 2001.
    The prefrontal cortex has long been suspected to play an important role in cognitive control, in the ability to orchestrate thought and action in accordance with internal goals. Its neural basis, however, has remained a mystery. Here, we propose that cognitive control stems from the active maintenance of patterns of activity in the prefrontal cortex that represent goals and the means to achieve them. They provide bias signals to other brain structures whose net effect is to guide the flow of act…Read more
    The prefrontal cortex has long been suspected to play an important role in cognitive control, in the ability to orchestrate thought and action in accordance with internal goals. Its neural basis, however, has remained a mystery. Here, we propose that cognitive control stems from the active maintenance of patterns of activity in the prefrontal cortex that represent goals and the means to achieve them. They provide bias signals to other brain structures whose net effect is to guide the flow of activity along neural pathways that establish the proper mappings between inputs, internal states, and outputs needed to perform a given task. We review neurophysiological, neurobiological, neuroimaging, and computational studies that support this theory and discuss its implications as well as further issues to be addressed
    Cognitive Psychology
  • On the neural implementation of optimal decisions
    with Patrick Simen and Philip Holmes
    In Ezequiel Morsella, John A. Bargh & Peter M. Gollwitzer (eds.), Oxford handbook of human action, Oxford University Press. 2009.
    Free Will and Psychology
  •  137
    Optimality and Some of Its Discontents: Successes and Shortcomings of Existing Models for Binary Decisions
    with Philip Holmes
    Topics in Cognitive Science 6 (2): 258-278. 2014.
    We review how leaky competing accumulators (LCAs) can be used to model decision making in two‐alternative, forced‐choice tasks, and we show how they reduce to drift diffusion (DD) processes in special cases. As continuum limits of the sequential probability ratio test, DD processes are optimal in producing decisions of specified accuracy in the shortest possible time. Furthermore, the DD model can be used to derive a speed–accuracy trade‐off that optimizes reward rate for a restricted class of t…Read more
    We review how leaky competing accumulators (LCAs) can be used to model decision making in two‐alternative, forced‐choice tasks, and we show how they reduce to drift diffusion (DD) processes in special cases. As continuum limits of the sequential probability ratio test, DD processes are optimal in producing decisions of specified accuracy in the shortest possible time. Furthermore, the DD model can be used to derive a speed–accuracy trade‐off that optimizes reward rate for a restricted class of two alternative forced‐choice decision tasks. We review findings that compare human performance with this benchmark, and we reveal both approximations to and deviations from optimality. We then discuss three potential sources of deviations from optimality at the psychological level—avoidance of errors, poor time estimation, and minimization of the cost of control—and review recent theoretical and empirical findings that address these possibilities. We also discuss the role of cognitive control in changing environments and in modulating exploitation and exploration. Finally, we consider physiological factors in which nonlinear dynamics may also contribute to deviations from optimality.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  •  577
    Pushing moral buttons: The interaction between personal force and intention in moral judgment
    with Joshua D. Greene, Fiery A. Cushman, Lisa E. Stewart, Kelly Lowenberg, and Leigh E. Nystrom
    Cognition 111 (3): 364-371. 2009.
    In some cases people judge it morally acceptable to sacrifice one person’s life in order to save several other lives, while in other similar cases they make the opposite judgment. Researchers have identified two general factors that may explain this phenomenon at the stimulus level: (1) the agent’s intention (i.e. whether the harmful event is intended as a means or merely foreseen as a side-effect) and (2) whether the agent harms the victim in a manner that is relatively “direct” or “personal”. …Read more
    In some cases people judge it morally acceptable to sacrifice one person’s life in order to save several other lives, while in other similar cases they make the opposite judgment. Researchers have identified two general factors that may explain this phenomenon at the stimulus level: (1) the agent’s intention (i.e. whether the harmful event is intended as a means or merely foreseen as a side-effect) and (2) whether the agent harms the victim in a manner that is relatively “direct” or “personal”. Here we integrate these two classes of findings. Two experiments examine a novel personalness/directness factor that we call personal force, present when the force that directly impacts the victim is generated by the agent’s muscles (e.g., in pushing). Experiments 1a and b demonstrate the influence of personal force on moral judgment, distinguishing it from physical contact and spatial proximity. Experiments 2a and b demonstrate an interaction between personal force and intention, whereby the effect of personal force depends entirely on intention. These studies also introduce a method for controlling for people’s real-world expectations in decisions involving potentially unrealistic hypothetical dilemmas.
    Control and ResponsibilityAgencyPhilosophy of Cognitive Science, MiscIssues in Psychology
  •  71
    Frontal eye fields: Inhibition through competition
    with Steven D. Forman and Mark H. Johnson
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (3): 578-578. 1993.
    Philosophy of Cognitive ScienceEmotion and Consciousness in Psychology
  •  1
    Should I stay or should I go? How the human brain manages the trade-off between exploitation and exploration
    with Samuel M. McClure &amp Yu and J. Angela
    In Jon Driver, Patrick Haggard & Tim Shallice (eds.), Mental Processes in the Human Brain, Oxford University Press. 2008.
  •  166
    Scientific Approaches to Consciousness (edited book)
    with Jonathan W. Schooler
    Lawrence Erlbaum. 1997.
    This volume takes the first step toward building the necessary local bridges.
    Science of Consciousness, MiscNeurobiological Theories and Models of ConsciousnessConsciousness and …Read more
    Science of Consciousness, MiscNeurobiological Theories and Models of ConsciousnessConsciousness and Neuroscience, Foundational IssuesOther Disorders and SyndromesNeural Correlates of Visual ConsciousnessCognitive Models of ConsciousnessAttention and Consciousness in PsychologyMetacognitionSelf-Consciousness in PsychologyConscious and Unconscious MemoryConsciousness and Psychology, MiscUnconscious PerceptionConscious and Unconscious LearningConsciousness, Sleep, and DreamingConsciousness and LanguageScience of Consciousness, Foundations
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