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PROFESSOR STEVAN HARNAD

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The paper The Symbol Grounding Problem said
There has been much discussion recently about the scope and limits of purely symbolic models of the mind and about the proper role of connectionism in cognitive modeling. This paper describes the "symbol grounding problem": How can the semantic interpretation of a formal symbol system be made intrinsic to the system, rather than just parasitic on the meanings in our heads? How can the meanings of the meaningless symbol tokens, manipulated solely on the basis of their (arbitrary) shapes, be grounded in anything but other meaningless symbols?
 
The problem is analogous to trying to learn Chinese from a Chinese/Chinese dictionary alone. A candidate solution is sketched: Symbolic representations must be grounded bottom-up in nonsymbolic representations of two kinds: (1) "iconic representations", which are analogs of the proximal sensory projections of distal objects and events, and (2) "categorical representations", which are learned and innate feature-detectors that pick out the invariant features of object and event categories from their sensory projections. Elementary symbols are the names of these object and event categories, assigned on the basis of their (nonsymbolic) categorical representations. Higher-order (3) "symbolic representations", grounded in these elementary symbols, consist of symbol strings describing category membership relations (e.g., "An X is a Y that is Z").
Professor Stevan Harnad authored this paper and is a Hungarian-born cognitive scientist. He did his undergraduate work at McGill University and earned his Ph.D. at Princeton University. He is currently Canada Research Chair in Cognitive Science at Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) and Professor of Cognitive Science at the University of Southampton. He is also an External Member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
 
His research is on categorization, communication, and cognition.
 
He is founder and editor (1978-2002) of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, a journal published by Cambridge University Press, Psycoloquy, an electronic journal sponsored by the American Psychological Association, and CogPrints, an electronic preprint archive in the cognitive sciences. He is also moderator of the American Scientist Open Access Forum.
 
Stevan authored To Cognize is to Categorize: Cognition is Categorization, Distributed Processes, Distributed Cognizers and Collaborative Cognition, Spielberg's AI: Another Cuddly No-Brainer, Can a machine be conscious? How?, and The Annotation Game: On Turing (1950) on Computing, Machinery, and Intelligence, and coauthored Earlier Web Usage Statistics as Predictors of Later Citation Impact and Ten-Year Cross-Disciplinary Comparison of the Growth of Open Access and How it Increases Research Citation. Read more of his papers on Cognitive Science and Online Research Communication and Open Access.
 
Read his blog Open Access Archivangelism: Maximizing Research Impact by Maximizing Research Access. Watch him speak in Monterey, Southampton - short 4 MB video, Southampton - long 52 MB video, and Southampton - very long 137 MB video. Print bio!