•  15
    Consciousness without Report: Insights from Summary Statistics and Inattention ‘Blindness’
    with Zohar Bronfman, Shiri Talmor, Hilla Jacobson, and Baruch Eitam
    Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 373 (1755). 2018.
    We contrast two theoretical positions on the relation between phenomenal and access consciousness. First, we discuss previous data supporting a mild Overflow position, according to which transient visual awareness can overflow report. These data are open to two interpretations: (i) observers transiently experience specific visual elements outside attentional focus without encoding them into working memory; (ii) no specific visual elements but only statistical summaries are experienced in such co…Read more
  • In this paper, we revisit the debate surrounding the Unfolding Argument (UA) against causal structure theories of consciousness (as well as the hard-criteria research program it prescribes), using it as a platform for discussing theoretical and methodological issues in consciousness research. Causal structure theories assert that consciousness depends on a particular causal structure of the brain. Our claim is that some of the assumptions fueling the UA are not warranted, and therefore we should…Read more
  •  9
    A naturalistic scheme of primitive conceptual representations is proposed using the statistical measure of mutual information. It is argued that a concept represents, not the class of objects that caused its tokening, but the class of objects that is most likely to have caused it (had it been tokened), as specified by the statistical measure of mutual information. This solves the problem of misrepresentation which plagues causal accounts, by taking the representation relation to be determined vi…Read more
  •  76
    Causal Responsibility and Robust Causation
    with Guy Grinfeld, David Lagnado, Tobias Gerstenberg, and James F. Woodward
    Frontiers in Psychology 11 1069. 2020.
    How do people judge the degree of causal responsibility that an agent has for the outcomes of her actions? We show that a relatively unexplored factor -- the robustness of the causal chain linking the agent’s action and the outcome -- influences judgments of causal responsibility of the agent. In three experiments, we vary robustness by manipulating the number of background circumstances under which the action causes the effect, and find that causal responsibility judgments increase with robustn…Read more
  •  30
    Neural mechanism for the magical number 4: Competitive interactions and nonlinear oscillation
    with Jonathan D. Cohen, 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).
  •  8
    Postscript: Contrasting predictions for preference reversal
    with Konstantinos Tsetsos and Nick Chater
    Psychological Review 117 (4): 1291-1293. 2010.
  •  21
    Preference reversal in multiattribute choice
    with Konstantinos Tsetsos and Nick Chater
    Psychological Review 117 (4): 1275-1291. 2010.
  •  18
    Value certainty in drift-diffusion models of preferential choice
    with Douglas G. Lee
    Psychological Review 130 (3): 790-806. 2023.
  •  15
  •  7
    Integration to boundary in decisions between numerical sequences
    with Moshe Glickman
    Cognition 193 104022. 2019.
  •  553
    The question of whether conscious experience is restricted by cognitive access and exhausted by report, or whether it overflows it—comprising more information than can be reported—is hotly debated. Recently, we provided evidence in favor of Overflow, showing that observers discriminated the color‐diversity (CD) of letters in an array, while their working‐memory and attention were dedicated to encoding and reporting a set of cued letters. An alternative interpretation is that CD‐discriminations d…Read more
  •  503
    Agency, Teleological Control and Robust Causation
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 100 (2): 302-324. 2018.
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, EarlyView.
  •  24
    Parallel attentive processing and pre-attentive guidance
    with Hermann J. Müller, Heinrich René Liesefeld, and Rani Moran
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40. 2017.
  •  11
    An appeal against the item's death sentence: Accounting for diagnostic data patterns with an item-based model of visual search
    with Rani Moran, Heinrich René Liesefeld, and Hermann J. Müller
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40. 2017.
  •  16
    Task conflict and proactive control: A computational theory of the Stroop task
    with Eyal Kalanthroff, Eddy J. Davelaar, Avishai Henik, and Liat Goldfarb
    Psychological Review 125 (1): 59-82. 2018.
  • The neurodynamics of choice, value-based decisions and preference reversal
    with Anat Elhalal &amp McClelland and James L.
    In Nick Chater & Mike Oaksford (eds.), The Probabilistic Mind: Prospects for Bayesian Cognitive Science, Oxford University Press. 2008.
  •  518
    A naturalistic scheme of primitive conceptual representations is proposed using the statistical measure of mutual information. It is argued that a concept represents, not the class of objects that caused its tokening, but the class of objects that is most likely to have caused it (had it been tokened), as specified by the statistical measure of mutual information. This solves the problem of misrepresentation which plagues causal accounts, by taking the representation relation to be determined vi…Read more
  •  43
    We See More Than We Can Report “Cost Free” Color Phenomenality Outside Focal Attention
    with Zohar Z. Bronfman, Noam Brezis, and Hilla Jacobson
    Psychological Science 25 (7): 1394-1403. 2014.
    The distinction between access consciousness and phenomenal consciousness is a subject of intensive debate. According to one view, visual experience overflows the capacity of the attentional and working memory system: We see more than we can report. According to the opposed view, this perceived richness is an illusion—we are aware only of information that we can subsequently report. This debate remains unresolved because of the inevitable reliance on report, which is limited in capacity. To bypa…Read more
  •  12
    Loss Aversion and Inhibition in Dynamical Models of Multialternative Choice
    with James L. McClelland
    Psychological Review 111 (3): 757-769. 2004.
  •  18
    'Tis all in pieces (separate RFs and CFs), all coherence gone
    with Ernst Neibur
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (4): 693-694. 1997.
    We argue that the separation between CF (contextual field) and RF (receptive field) in relation to the NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) system is empirically questionable and that it is functionally unnecessary. In addition, the proposed suppression of unexpected information will in many cases be counterproductive.
  •  46
    The time course of perceptual choice: The leaky, competing accumulator model
    with James L. McClelland
    Psychological Review 108 (3): 550-592. 2001.
  •  12
    Postscript: Through TCM, STM shines bright
    with Eddy J. Davelaar, Henk J. Haarmann, and Yonatan Goshen-Gottstein
    Psychological Review 115 (4): 1116-1118. 2008.
  •  16
    Short-term memory after all: Comment on Sederberg, Howard, and Kahana (2008)
    with Eddy J. Davelaar, Henk J. Haarmann, and Yonatan Goshen-Gottstein
    Psychological Review 115 (4): 1108-1116. 2008.
  •  19
    Disentangling decision models: From independence to competition
    with Andrei R. Teodorescu
    Psychological Review 120 (1): 1-38. 2013.
  •  93
    The merit of the SINBAD model is to provide an explicit mechanism showing how the cortex may come to develop detectors responding to correlated properties and therefore corresponding to the sources of these correlations. Here I argue that, contrary to the article, SINBAD neurosemantics does not need to rely on teleofunctions to solve the problem of misrepresentation. A number of difficulties for the teleofunction theories of content are reviewed and an alternative theory based on categorization …Read more
  •  26
    The Demise of Short-Term Memory Revisited: Empirical and Computational Investigations of Recency Effects
    with Eddy J. Davelaar, Yonatan Goshen-Gottstein, Amir Ashkenazi, and Henk J. Haarmann
    Psychological Review 112 (1): 3-42. 2005.
  •  26
    The neurodynamics of choice, value-based decisions, and preference reversal
    with Anat Elhalal and James L. McClelland
    In Nick Chater & Mike Oaksford (eds.), The Probabilistic Mind: Prospects for Bayesian Cognitive Science, Oxford University Press. pp. 277--300. 2008.