Connectionist Epistemology
Introduction
Connectionism - the use of neural networks for knowledge
representation and inference - has profound implications for the
representation and processing of information, because it provides
a fundamentally new view of knowledge.
This research seeks to understand connectionist epistemology,
for its applications in artificial intelligence, cognitive science
and neuroscience.
Publications (reverse chronological order)
- “Protophenomena: The Elements of Consciousness and their Relation
to the Brain”
[html,
doc].
- “Transcending Turing Computability” [postscript]
Technical Report UT-CS-01-473, November 12, 2001.
handouts and
slides for a talk are also available.
- “Contextual Back-Propagation” [postscript]
Technical Report UT-CS-00-443, September 12, 2000.
- “Neurophenomenological Constraints and Pushing Back the Subjectivity
Barrier” [compressed postscript, postscript]
Technical Report UT-CS-99-419, April 20, 1999.
Extended version of commentary
in
Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22, pp. 961-963.
- “The Protophenomenal Structure of Consciousness,
with Especial Application to the Experience of Color:
Extended Version” [postscript],
Technical Report CS-99-418, March 1999 (revised April, 2002).
Extended version of a paper presented at
International Conference on Consciousness in Science and Philosophy '98,
Charleston, IL, November 6-7, 1998.
- “Mixing Memory and Desire: Want and Will in Neural Modeling”
[compressed postscript postscript, pdf],
by Bruce MacLennan,
invited paper for the
Fifth Appalachian Conference on Behavioral Neurodynamics,
The Brain and Values,
October 18-20, 1996;
published in
Brain and Values: Is a Biological Science of Values Possible,
Karl H. Pribram (Ed.), Mahwah: Lawrence Erlbaum, 1998, pp. 31-42.
(The postscript mathematics looks funny with some viewers, but seems to print OK.
Send me mail
if you have problems.
Unfortunately, the mathematics in the published version of the paper is completely
garbled.)
- “The Protophenomenal Structure of Consciousness,
with Especial Application to the Experience of Color” [postscript],
Technical Report CS-98-397, August 19, 1998.
Also available as hypertext.
Summary of paper to be presented at
International Conference on Consciousness in Science and Philosophy '98,
Charleston, IL, November 6-7, 1998.
-
“Finding Order in our World: The Primacy of the Concrete in Neural
Representations and the Role of Invariance in Substance
Reidentification (Extended Version)” [compressed postscript],
Technical Report CS-97-378, November 26, 1997;
extended version of a commentary to appear in
Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
Also available as
hypertext.
-
"The Elements of Consciousness and their Neurodynamical Correlates,"
by Bruce MacLennan,
Journal of Consciousness Studies,
Vol. 3 (1996), Nos. 5/6, pp. 409-424.
Reprinted in
Explaining Consciousness: The Hard Problem,
Jonathan Shear (Ed.),
Cambridge: MIT Press, 1995-7, pp. 249-66.
Available
as hypertext
and
in postscript form.
An expanded version of this paper, including an appendix
describing a mathematical model
of protophenomena, is available as a technical report, “Protophenomena and their Neurodymanical Correlates”
(CS-96-331), in
hypertext
and in
postscript form.
Also available in
CogPrint archives
-
Previous (now superceded) version of “The Elements of Consciousness and
their Neurodynamical Correlates,” [in hypertext form]
by Bruce MacLennan.
-
“Continuous Formal Systems: A Unifying Model in Language and
Cognition,” by Bruce MacLennan.
Appears in the proceedings of the
IEEE Workshop on
Architectures for Semiotic Modeling and Situation Analysis
in Large Complex Systems,
August 27-29, 1995, Monterey, CA.
A
slightly extended version
is available as a technical report.
-
“The Investigation of Consciousness Through Phenomenology and Neuroscience”
by Bruce MacLennan.
Invited contribution, Scale in Conscious Experience:
Is the Brain Too Important to be Left to Specialists to Study?
Joseph King & Karl H.Pribram (Eds.),
Mahwah: Lawrence-Erlbaum, 1995, pp. 25-43.
-
“Words Lie in Our Way,”
by Bruce MacLennan,
Minds and Machines,
special issue on "What is Computation?"
Vol. 4, No. 4 (November 1994), pp. 421-437.
-
“Continuous Computation and the Emergence of the Discrete”
[
pdf,
uncompressed postscript,
compressed postscript,
gzipped postscript],
by Bruce MacLennan,
invited contribution,
Origins: Brain & Self-Organization,
edited by Karl Pribram,
Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 1994, pp. 121-151.
Also University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Department of Computer Science
Technical Report CS-94-227,
March 24, 1994, 41 pp.
-
“Grounding Analog Computers” [html] by Bruce MacLennan, June 1993.
(commentary on S. Harnad, “Grounding Symbols in the Analog World with
Neural Nets”),
by Bruce MacLennan,
Think 2, June 1993, pp. 48-51.
Reprinted in
Psycoloquy 12 (52), 2001.
Also postscript and pdf.
-
“Image and Symbol:
Continuous Computation and the Emergence of the Discrete”
[
compressed postscript,
postscript,
pdf],
by Bruce MacLennan,
invited contribution for book,
Artificial Intelligence and Neural Networks:
Steps Toward Principled Integration,
edited by Vasant Honavar and Leonard Uhr,
New York, NY: Academic Press,
1994,
pp. 207-240.
Also University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Department of Computer Science
Technical Report CS-93-199,
December 18, 1992 (revised August 5, 1993), 33 pages.
A proposed theoretical construct (the
simulacrum) for connectionist models analogous to the calculus
in symbolic models.
-
“Continuous Symbol Systems: The Logic of Connectionism”
[compressed postscript,
postscript,
pdf],
by Bruce MacLennan,
Neural Networks for Knowledge Representation and Inference,
edited by Daniel S. Levine and Manuel Aparicio IV,
Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum,
1994,
pp. 83-120.
Also University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Computer Science Department
technical report CS-91-145, September 1991, 47 pages.
This paper presents a preliminary formulation of continuous symbol
systems and indicates how they may aid in understanding the
development of connectionist theories.
-
“Visualizing the Possibilities”
(review of Johnson-Laird & Byrne’s Deduction),
by Bruce MacLennan,
Behavioral and Brain Sciences,
16, 2 (June 1993), pp. 356-357.
-
“Characteristics of Connectionist Knowledge Representation,”
by Bruce MacLennan,
Information Sciences 70 (1993), pp. 119-143.
Also University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Department of Computer Science
Technical Report CS-91-147, November 1991, 22 pages.
We present a construct, called a simulacrum, which has a similar relation
to connectionist knowledge representation as the calculus does to
symbolic knowledge representation. [ps, pdf]
-
“Research Issues in Flexible Computing: Two Presentations in Japan,”
by Bruce MacLennan,
University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Department of Computer Science
Technical Report CS-92-172,
September 4, 1992, 17 pages.
The text of two
presentations made in Japan both of which deal with the
Japanese “Real World Computing Project” (informally known as the “Sixth Generation Project”)
-
“The Discomforts of Dualism”
(review of Roger Penrose,
The Emperor’s New Mind: Concerning Computers, Minds,
and the Laws of Physics),
by Bruce MacLennan,
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
13, No. 4 (December 1990), pp. 673-674.
-
“Causes and Intentions”
(commentary on Dennett’s
The Intentional Stance),
by Bruce MacLennan,
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
11, No. 3 (September 1988), pp. 519-520.
-
“Logic for the New AI,”
by Bruce MacLennan,
Aspects of Artificial Intelligence,
J. H. Fetzer (ed.),
Kluwer, Dordrecht, 1988, pp. 163-192. [pdf, ps]
-
“Field Computation and Nonpropositional Knowledge,”
by Bruce MacLennan,
Naval Postgraduate School Technical Report
NPS52-87-040,
September 1987, 31 pages. [pdf, ps]
Return to MacLennan's home page
Send mail to Bruce MacLennan / MacLennan@cs.utk.edu
This page is www.cs.utk.edu/~mclennan/conn-epist.html
Last updated: 2007-11-24.