Logic as Marr's computational level: four case studies
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| Publication date | 04-2015 |
| Journal | Topics in Cognitive Science |
| Event | Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society |
| Volume | Issue number | 7 | 2 |
| Pages (from-to) | 287-298 |
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| Abstract |
We sketch four applications of Marr's levels-of-analysis methodology to the relations between logic and experimental data in the cognitive neuroscience of language and reasoning. The first part of the paper illustrates the explanatory power of computational level theories based on logic. We show that a Bayesian treatment of the suppression task in reasoning with conditionals is ruled out by EEG data, supporting instead an analysis based on defeasible logic. Further, we describe how results from an EEG study on temporal prepositions can be reanalyzed using formal semantics, addressing a potential confound. The second part of the article demonstrates the predictive power of logical theories drawing on EEG data on processing progressive constructions and on behavioral data on conditional reasoning in people with autism. Logical theories can constrain processing hypotheses all the way down to neurophysiology, and conversely neuroscience data can guide the selection of alternative computational level models of cognition.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | In special issue: Thirty years after Marr's Vision: Levels of analysis in Cognitive Science; Edited by David Peebles and Richard P. Cooper; Best of Papers from the Cognitive Science Society Annual Conference |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1111/tops.12125 |
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