Phillips, S. (1998) Are feedforward and recurrent networks systematic? Analysis and implications for a connectionist cognitive architecture. [Journal (Paginated)]
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Abstract
Human cognition is said to be systematic: cognitive ability generalizes to structurally related behaviours. The connectionist approach to cognitive theorizing has been strongly criticized for its failure to explain systematicity. Demonstrations of generalization notwithstanding, I show that two widely used networks (feedforward and recurrent) do not support systematicity under the condition of local input/output representations. For a connectionist explanation of systematicity, these results leave two choices, either: (1) develop models capable of systematicity under local input/output representations; or (2) justify the choice of similarity-based (nonlocal) component representations sufficient for systematicity.
Item Type: | Journal (Paginated) |
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Keywords: | strong systematicity, connectionism, classicism, feedforward network, recurrent network, tensor network, weight sharing, local representation, compositionality, association, relation |
Subjects: | Psychology > Cognitive Psychology Computer Science > Neural Nets Philosophy > Philosophy of Mind |
ID Code: | 520 |
Deposited By: | Phillips, Steven |
Deposited On: | 10 Dec 1998 |
Last Modified: | 11 Mar 2011 08:54 |
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