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Author Howard, Harry (Harry duBignon)

Title Neuromimetic semantics : coordination, quantification, and collective predicates / Harry Howard.

Imprint Amsterdam ; Boston : Elsevier, 2004.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Elsevier ScienceDirect Ebook  Electronic Book    ---  Available
Edition 1st ed.
Description 1 online resource (xxv, 527 pages) : illustrations
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 483-514) and index.
Contents Modest vs. robust theories of semantics -- Single neuron modeling -- Logical measures -- The representation of coordinator meanings -- Neuromimetic networks for coordinator meanings -- The representation of quantifier meanings -- ANNs for quantifier learning and recognition -- Inferences among logical operators -- The failure of subalternacy : reciprocity and center-oriented constructions -- Networks of real neurons -- Three generations of cognitive science.
Summary This book attempts to marry truth-conditional semantics with cognitive linguistics in the church of computational neuroscience. To this end, it examines the truth-conditional meanings of coordinators, quantifiers, and collective predicates as neurophysiological phenomena that are amenable to a neurocomputational analysis. Drawing inspiration from work on visual processing, and especially the simple/complex cell distinction in early vision (V1), we claim that a similar two-layer architecture is sufficient to learn the truth-conditional meanings of the logical coordinators and logical quantifiers. As a prerequisite, much discussion is given over to what a neurologically plausible representation of the meanings of these items would look like. We eventually settle on a representation in terms of correlation, so that, for instance, the semantic input to the universal operators (e.g. and, all)is represented as maximally correlated, while the semantic input to the universal negative operators (e.g. nor, no)is represented as maximally anticorrelated. On the basis this representation, the hypothesis can be offered that the function of the logical operators is to extract an invariant feature from natural situations, that of degree of correlation between parts of the situation. This result sets up an elegant formal analogy to recent models of visual processing, which argue that the function of early vision is to reduce the redundancy inherent in natural images. Computational simulations are designed in which the logical operators are learned by associating their phonological form with some degree of correlation in the inputs, so that the overall function of the system is as a simple kind of pattern recognition. Several learning rules are assayed, especially those of the Hebbian sort, which are the ones with the most neurological support. Learning vector quantization (LVQ) is shown to be a perspicuous and efficient means of learning the patterns that are of interest. We draw a formal parallelism between the initial, competitive layer of LVQ and the simple cell layer in V1, and between the final, linear layer of LVQ and the complex cell layer in V1, in that the initial layers are both selective, while the final layers both generalize. It is also shown how the representations argued for can be used to draw the traditionally-recognized inferences arising from coordination and quantification, and why the inference of subalternacy breaks down for collective predicates. Finally, the analogies between early vision and the logical operators allow us to advance the claim of cognitive linguistics that language is not processed by proprietary algorithms, but rather by algorithms that are general to the entire brain. Thus in the debate between objectivist and experiential metaphysics, this book falls squarely into the camp of the latter. Yet it does so by means of a rigorous formal, mathematical, and neurological exposition in contradiction of the experiential claim that formal analysis has no place in the understanding of cognition. To make our own counter-claim as explicit as possible, we present a sketch of the LVQ structure in terms of mereotopology, in which the initial layer of the network performs topological operations, while the final layer performs mereological operations. The book is meant to be self-contained, in the sense that it does not assume any prior knowledge of any of the many areas that are touched upon. It therefore contains mini-summaries of biological visual processing, especially the retinocortical and ventral /what?/ parvocellular pathways; computational models of neural signaling, and in particular the reduction of the Hodgkin-Huxley equations to the connectionist and integrate-and-fire neurons; Hebbian learning rules and the elaboration of learning vector quantization; the linguistic pathway in the left hemisphere; memory and the hippocampus; truth-conditional vs. image-schematic semantics; objectivist vs. experiential metaphysics; and mereotopology. All of the simulations are implemented in MATLAB, and the code is available from the books website. The discovery of several algorithmic similarities between visison and semantics. The support of all of this by means of simulations, and the packaging of all of this in a coherent theoretical framework.
Note Print version record.
Subject Semantics.
Neurosciences.
Logic.
Grammar, Comparative and general -- Coordinate constructions.
Grammar, Comparative and general -- Quantifiers.
Psycholinguistics.
Computer Simulation
Neural Pathways -- physiology
Models, Neurological
Nerve Net -- physiology
Neural Networks, Computer
Psycholinguistics
Neurosciences
Neurosciences.
Coordonnées (Linguistique)
Quantificateurs (Linguistique)
Simulation par ordinateur.
Psycholinguistique.
simulation.
psycholinguistics.
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES -- Linguistics -- Semantics.
Grammar, Comparative and general -- Coordinate constructions
Grammar, Comparative and general -- Quantifiers
Logic
Neurosciences
Semantics
Other Form: Print version: Howard, Harry (Harry duBignon). Neuromimetic semantics. 1st ed. Amsterdam ; Boston : Elsevier, 2004 0444502084 9780444502087 (DLC) 2004050077 (OCoLC)55036941
ISBN 9780444502087
0444502084
9781435605237 (electronic bk.)
1435605233 (electronic bk.)
0080537448 (electronic bk.)
9780080537443 (electronic bk.)
Standard No. AU@ 000051860519
CHNEW 001005554
DEBBG BV042307454
DEBSZ 405301014
DEBSZ 434185388
NZ1 12434417
AU@ 000075315171

 
    
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