Combinatorial Structures in Language and Visual Cognition

What gives humans the unique ability to construct novel sentences from the building blocks of language? A recent article in Behavioral and Brain Sciences proposes a “neural blackboard architecture” is capable of just this.

From the article (doi: 10.1017/S0140525X06009022):

“This paper aims to show that neural “blackboard” architectures can provide an adequate theoretical basis for a neural instantiation of combinatorial cognitive structures. [...] We also discuss the similarities between the neural blackboard architecture of sentence structure and neural blackboard architectures of combinatorial structures in visual cognition and visual working memory [...]”

As with all main articles in Behavioral and Brain Sciences, this one is followed by extensive comment and criticism from colleagues, and finally a reply by the authors. This provides a very deep look at the article and the issues surrounding it.

An older, but freely available, version of the article is available here.

One Response to “Combinatorial Structures in Language and Visual Cognition”

  1. Ross Gayler Says:

    My commentary on the van der Velde & de Kamps article is available from my home page: http://r.gayler.googlepages.com/home

    Anyone interested in the neural representation of combinatorial structures may want to look at the symposium on Compositional Connectionism that Simon Levy and I organised: http://www.cs.wlu.edu/~levy/aaai04/

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