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Computation in cognitive science: it is not all about Turing-equivalent computation
Authors:Kenneth Aizawa
Institution:Department of Philosophy, Centenary College of Louisiana, 2911 Centenary Boulevard, Shreveport, LA 71104, USA
Abstract:It is sometimes suggested that the history of computation in cognitive science is one in which the formal apparatus of Turing-equivalent computation, or effective computability, was exported from mathematical logic to ever wider areas of cognitive science and its environs. This paper, however, indicates some respects in which this suggestion is inaccurate. Computability theory has not been focused exclusively on Turing-equivalent computation. Many essential features of Turing-equivalent computation are not captured in definitions of computation as (digital) symbol manipulation. Turing-equivalent computation did not play the role in McCulloch and Pitts’s early cybernetic work that is sometimes attributed to it. Finally, various segments of the neuroscientific community invoke a notion of computation that differs from the Turing-equivalent notion.
Keywords:Circular causality  Computation  Cortical maps  Neural networks  Symbol manipulation  Turing-equivalent computation
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