[net.cog-eng] Society for Philosophy and Psychology - Meeting Program

rba@petrus.UUCP (05/15/85)

SOCIETY FOR PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY
Annual Meeting, University of Toronto, 15 - 18 May 1985

Theme: "EXPLAINING COGNITION: CONSCIOUS AND UNCONSCIOUS"

For program information the unixnet address for the chairman is:
bellcore!princeton!mind!srh
or write to:  Stevan Harnad, Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 20 Nas-
sau Street, Suite 240, Princeton NJ 08540

For information about local arrangements, write to: David  Olson,
McLuhan Center, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, CANADA

For information about the Society and attendance, write to:  Owen
Flanagan, Secretary/Treasurer, Society for Philosophy & Psycholo-
gy, Philosophy Department, Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA 02181

                P  R  O  G  R  A  M

	Wednesday 15 May: 9am - 12 noon

Symposium: "The Empirical Status of Psychoanalytic Theory"
Chairman: P. Carvath

The empirical status of psychoanalytic theory will be  considered
in terms of the following questions: (1) Is psychoanalytic theory
testable? (2) If so, how much of it is testable, and, in particu-
lar,  what  parts? (3) How is it testable (clinically? experimen-
tally? epidemiologically?)? (4) How much of psychoanalytic theory
has  actually  been tested in these ways, and was the theory sup-
ported by the evidence? (5) Are future  tests  of  psychoanalytic
theory  likely  to yield outcomes that support the theory, and is
this theory the best one to use to guide future research? (6)  Is
the  proportion of psychoanalytic theory that is testable compar-
able to the proportions of other scientific theories that are te-
stable,  or  is  evidence  disproportionately  remote from or ir-
relevant to psychoanalytic theory? (7) Is testability  irrelevant
to some kinds of theoretical understanding? (8) Is psychoanalytic
theory based on  adequate  views  of  conscious  and  unconscious
processes  and  explanation? These questions will be discussed by
clinicians, experimentalists and methodologists of science.

THE VALIDITY OF  HIDDEN  MOTIVES  IN  PSYCHOANALYTIC  THEORY  
(A. Grunbaum)
EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF FREUDIAN THEORY (E. Erwin)
OBLIQUE TESTS OF PSYCHOANALYTIC HYPOTHESES (M. Eagle)
Discussants: B. von Eckardt, R. Woolfolk, J. Masling
----------
(Parrallel) Paper Session: "Perception and Cognition"
Chairman: C. Normore
To What Extent Do Beliefs Affect Apparent Motion?
(M. Dawson & R. Wright; discussant: P. Kolers)
Images, Pictures and Percepts
(D. Reisberg & D. Chambers; discussant: W. Savage)
What the First Words Tell Us About Meaning and Cognition
(A. Gopnik; discussant: G. Matthews)
_________________________________________________________________

	Wednesday 15 May: 2pm - 5pm

Symposium: "Unconscious Processing"
Chairman: P. Kolers

It is undeniable that most cerebral information processing is un-
conscious.  Not only are vegetative functions such as posture and
respiration (as well as automatized, overlearned skills)  uncons-
ciously  controlled  by  the  brain, but even the basic processes
underlying higher cognitive activity are unavailable to conscious
introspection:  No  one knows "how" he actually adds two and two,
retrieves a name, recognizes a face. This is what makes cognitive
modeling a nontrivial enterprise. But apart from these basic cog-
nitive processes (about which  our  ignorance  is  sufficient  to
demonstrate  that  that  they  are not conscious), there are some
kinds of processes that are at least normally accompanied by some
awareness  of  their  occurrence.  These  include  the detection,
discrimination and identification of verbal  and  perceptual  in-
puts.  New data indicate that even these activities may sometimes
occur without introspective awareness of their  occurrence.  This
new  look  at  "subliminal perception" and related phenomena in a
contemporary  psychophysical,  information  processing  framework
will  examine the evidence, methodological criteria and theoreti-
cal interpretations of the newer findings.  

CONSCIOUSNESS AND PROCESSING (A. J. Marcel)
ON  GETTING  INFORMATION  FROM  THE  COGNITIVE  UNCONSCIOUS   
(T. Carr)
DISTINGUISHING CONSCIOUS FROM  UNCONSCIOUS  PERCEPTUAL  PROCESSES
(P. Merikle)
Discussants: W. Savage, A. Treisman, TBA
----------
(Parallel) Paper Session: "Induction and Information"
Chairman: R. Cohen
Beyond Holism: Induction in the Context of Problem-Solving
(P. Thagard & K. Holyoak; discussant: C. F. Schmidt)
The Pragmatics of Semantics
(M.A. Gluck & C.E. Corter; discussant: D. H. Helman)
About Promises
(J. Astington; discussant: L. Forgerson)
_________________________________________________________________

	Wednesday 15 May: 7pm - 10pm

Symposium: "Paradoxical Neurological States"
Chairman: R. Puccetti

This symposium will consider neurological states that  (based  on
their  symptoms and inferences from their symptoms) are very hard
to imagine "being in." These include: (1) "blindsight," i.e., the
loss  of  all conscious visual experience, but with the retention
of "visual" information (e.g., object location); (2) the  anosag-
nosias  and attentional disorders, i.e., the apparent unawareness
and denial of dramatic neurological  deficits  such  as  loss  of
large  portions  of  the  visual  field or of body sensation; (3)
deconnection phenomena such as alexia  without  agraphia  (intact
vision  with the loss of all ability to read but the retention of
the ability to write) or the  split-brain patient's   ability  to
match but inability to name out-of-sight objects grasped with the
left hand; (4) various memory disorders such as  the  ability  to
acquire  cognitive information and skills with complete inability
to remember the episodes in which they were acquired;
            (5)  confabulations  arising  from  these paradoxical
states (i.e., the unusual way patients rationalize  having  these
deficits). The clinical phenomenology of these paradoxical states
will be described and then they will be  discussed  in  terms  of
current philosophical, psychological and neurological theories of
cognition and consciousness.

ON BEING UNAWARE OF BEING UNAWARE: AGNOSTICISM AND  CONFABULATION
ABOUT ONE'S AGNOSIA (O. Sacks)
NEW OBSERVATIONS ON VERBAL DISSOCIATIONS IN SPLIT-BRAIN  PATIENTS
(M.S. Gazzaniga)
VISUAL  AGNOSIA:  SEPARATION  OF   PERCEPT   FROM   PRECEPT   
(A. Kertesz)
Discussants: A. Marcel, P.Churchland, TBA
----------
(Parallel) Paper Session: "Category Formation - I"
Chairman: M. Thornton
On Beyond Zebra: The Relation of Linguistic and  Visual  Informa-
tion   (R. Jackendoff)
Discussant: R. Millikan ("Back Before Aardvark")
_________________________________________________________________

	Thursday 16 May: 9am - 12 noon

Symposium: "Category Formation - II"
Chairman: G. Hirst

Categorization is a fundamental human activity. It is involved in
everything  from operant discrimination to perceptual recognition
to naming to describing.  Five different approaches to  categori-
zation  now  exist more or less in parallel: (1) The nativist ap-
proach, which holds that there are few, if any, nontrivial induc-
tive  categories,  and  hence  that most categories are preformed
                   (2) the statistical  pattern  recognition  and
multidimensional scaling approach, which computer-models category
formation probabilistically; (3) the artificial intelligence  ap-
proach,  which  models  categorization  with  symbol-manipulation
rules; (4) the  natural  category  approach,  which  investigates
categorization through reaction time studies and typicality judg-
ments and developmentally; (5)  the  categorical  perception  ap-
proach,  which investigates categorization through discrimination
and identification studies. These approaches  will  be  presented
and the interaction will aim at a synthesis.

CATEGORICAL PERCEPTION, CATEGORY INDUCTION AND CATEGORY REPRESEN-
TATION   (S. Harnad)
INDEXING AND LEARNING   (R. Schank)
ON THE EXISTENCE, NATURE AND PLASTICITY OF PERCEPTUAL
CATEGORIES   (N. Macmillan)
Discussants: M. Lipton, G. Matthews, D. Young 
_________________________________________________________________

	Thursday 16 May: 2pm - 5pm

Workshop I: "Artificial Intelligence Versus  Neural  Modeling  In
Psychological Theory"
Chairman: J. Barnden

The issues will be discussed at two levels, a practical  one  (P)
and  a foundational one (F). At the practical level the following
two questions will be considered: (P1) Is  psychological  theory-
building more successful with or without constraints from neuros-
cientific evidence and neuroscientific considerations?  (P2)  Are
the current differences between models that are neurally motivat-
ed (which tend to be statistical,  connectionistic,  and  lately,
parallel)  and models that are not neurally motivated (which tend
to be symbol/sentence manipulative) fundamental differences,  and
is one approach more promising than the other?
At the foundational level the questions will be:  (F1)  What  are
the data that psychological theory should account for (behavioral
performance? cognitive competence? real-time topography and  exe-
cution? neural activity?)? (F2) Is a successful functional theory
of  higher  cognitive  performance  and  competence   necessarily
"implementation-independent"  (i.e., independent of the architec-
ture of the mechanism that embodies it)? Tne issues will be  dis-
cussed in the context of actual current work in modeling.

ARCHITECTURAL  LEVELS,  SYMBOLS  AND   SUCH-LIKE   THINGS     (A.
                                                      Newell)
EPISTEMOLOGY AND THE NEW CONNECTIONISM   (A. Goldman)
CORTICAL CONNECTIONS AND PARALLEL PROCESSING   (D. Ballard)
NEURAL DYNAMICS OF ADAPTIVE PATTERN RECOGNITION: AUTOMATIC MATCH-
ING, SEARCH AND CATEGORY FORMATION   (S. Grossberg)
PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORY AS EPISTEMOLOGY   (P.C. Dodwell)
Discussants: J. Feldman, S.J. Hanson, P.  Kitcher,
W. Lycan, A. Pellionisz, R. Schank
----------
	Thursday 16 May: 7pm - 10pm

Workshop II: "AI vs. NM" (continuation of Workshop I)
Chairman: W. Seager
(see Workshop I)
_________________________________________________________________

	Friday 17 May: 9am - 12 noon

Symposium: "Memory and Consciousness"
Chairman: R. Lockhart

The symposium will examine the distinction  between  memory  (the
consequence of some experience) and remembering (the awareness of
past events), which involves consciousness of a past  experience.
The  distinction  involves  the relation between mental processes
that reasonably decribe the performance  of  intelligent  systems
(whether  animals,  people  or  machines), that is, "subpersonal"
cognitive psychology, and the intentional mental  activities  and
states of conscious human adults: "intentional psychology."

MEMORY, INTUITION AND MENO'S PARADOX   (K. Bowers)
MEMORY   AND   CONSCIOUSNESS   IN   ORGANIC    AMNESIA      (D.L.
                                               Schacter)
MEMORY AS CONSCIOUS RECOLLECTION: COMPARATIVE  AND  DEVELOPMENTAL
ASPECTS   (M.M. Moscovitch)
Discussants: A. Marcel, E. Tulving, TBA
----------
(Parallel) Paper Session: "Inferences About the Mind"
Chairman: J. Poland
The Puzzle of the Split-Brain Phenomenon
(S.C. Bringsjord; discussant: R. Puccetti)
The Mark of the Mental
(R. Puccetti; discussant: L. Alanen)
Natural Teleology
(S. Silvers; discussant: J. Barnden)
__________________________________________________________________

	Friday 17 May: 2pm - 5pm

Symposium: "The Reality  of  the  'G'  (General)  Factor  in  the
Measurent and Modeling of Cognitive Capacity"
Chairman: P. Hertzberg

When intelligence tests are factor-analyzed (i.e., the  structure
of  their  correlations  with  one  another is reduced to a small
number of underlying variables), one general, overall factor  al-
ways  emerges, along with a number of special factors peculiar to
some groups of tests and not others. The general ("g") factor has
been  interpreted  as  a unitary measure of general intelligence.
Some have challenged the reality of "g" on the grounds that indi-
vidual test items (and indeed entire tests) are so constructed as
to correlate with one another, and  hence  the  overall  positive
correlation factor is built in; moreover, it is argued that it is
fallacious to think in terms of  an  underlying,  one-dimensional
unitary intelligence. Others have argued that "g" is an empirical
finding after all, because even tests constructed  and  validated
to  measure  the  special  abilities (e.g., verbal versus spatial
skills) have high "g" loadings, and indeed the more  discriminat-
ing  tests (the ones that are more sensitive to and predictive of
individual differences) tend to have the higher "g" loadings. The
technical  and  conceptual  problems of measuring, validating and
modeling human cognitive capacities will be discussed in the con-
text of the interpretation of "g."

USING BASIC COGNITIVE TASKS TO PREDICT  INTELLECTUAL  FUNCTIONING
(D. K. Detterman)
THE 'G' BEYOND FACTOR ANALYSIS   (A. Jensen)
TBA
Discussants: W. Rozeboom, R. Traub, TBA
----------
(Parallel) Paper Session: "Evolution of Social and Cognitive Structures"
Chairman: C. Olsen
Is Decision Theory Reducible to Evolutionary Biology?
(W.S, Cooper; discussant: F. Wilson)
Human Nature, Love and Morality: The Possibility of Altruism
(L. Thomas; discussant: N. Mrosovsky)
On How To Get Rid of the Craftsman
(B. Dahlbom; discussant: K. Norwich)
_________________________________________________________________

	Friday 17 May: 7pm - 8:30pm

Presidential Address
Chairman: F. Dretske (president-elect)
REDUCTIONISM IN THE INVESTIGATION OF CONSCIOUSNESS
P. S. Churchland (president, SPP)
_________________________________________________________________

	Saturday 18 May: 9am - 12 noon

Symposium: New Directions in Evolutionary Theory
Chairman: A. Jensen

Among the current developments in evolutionary theory  and  their
implications  for  psychology that will be discussed are: (1) The
"new preformationism," arising chiefly from develomental biology,
according  to  which there are substantial structural constraints
on the variation on which selection  can  operate;  this  implies
that  there  are structures and functions that cannot be regarded
as having been shaped by random variation and selection by conse-
quences  but  rather as having arisen from boundary conditions on
biological structures. The issue  is  particularlly  relevant  to
questions  about  the  origins of cognitive and linguistic struc-
tures.                 (2) Current sociobiological theory has be-
come  concerned  with cognitive questions, in particular, the ex-
istence  of  "cognitive  primitives"  on  which  selection  would
operate in a way that is analogous to its effects on traits coded
by genes: Is this "gene-culture co-evolution" and its  new  unit,
the  "culturgen"  just  overinclusive curve-fitting or is there a
real empirical phenomenon here? (3) In general, are the kinds  of
assumptions  and inclusive-fitness calculations that characterize
sociobiological theorizing (and that  have  been  critically  re-
ferred to as "just-so stories") a reasonable explanatory handicap
or signs of taking the wrong theoretical direction?  In  particu-
lar,  when  is  a  conscious, cognitive explanation of a behavior
preferable  to  an  unconscious,  fitness-related one?

THE NEW PREFORMATIONISM: AN EMBRYOLOGIST'S PERSPECTIVE
(E. Balon; discussant: M. Ruse)
METHODOLOGICAL BEHAVIORISM, EVOLUTION AND GAME THEORY
(E. Sober; discussant: A. Rapoport)
EVOLUTIONARY VERSUS COGNITIVE EXPLANATIONS OF CRIME  AND  PUNISH-
MENT: A FALSE DICHOTOMY
(W. Shields; discussant: A. Rosenberg)
------------------------------

(Parallel) Symposium: "Psychology, Pictures and Drawing"
Chairman: W. Savage

The past decade has seen considerable interest in theory of  dep-
iction  and  allied  theories  of  drawing.  Current theories are
technically well constructed, significant in themselves  and,  in
addition,  have  important  implications for neighboring areas of
psychology. Yet they are often distinct in the  assumptions  they
make  about  perception,  communication  and the environment. The
present symposium  draws  together  philosophers,  educators  and
psychologists who have developed theories about pictures, percep-
tion and drawing. Assumptions will be reviewed  and  implications
will be discussed.

PRODUCTION PROCESSES FOR DRAWING: FUNCTIONAL UNITS OF INFORMATION
PROCESSING   (J. Caron-Pargue)
A  NEOSTRUCTURALIST  ANALYSIS  OF   DRAWING   DEVELOPMENT     (S.
                                                      Dennis)
MENTALISM AND PICTURES: THE  POWERS  OF  ELEMENTS,  CHOICES  OVER
GEOMETRIES AND PICTORIAL METAPHORS   (J.M. Kennedy)
THEORIES OF PICTURES AND THE PICTURE THEORY OF PERCEPTION
  (S. Wilcox)
CLASSIFYING PICTURES: A THEORY OF PICTORIAL REPRESENTATION  BASED
ON MARR'S ACCOUNT OF VISION   (J. Willats)
Discussants: S. Brison, D. Pariser
_________________________________________________________________

	Saturday 18 May: 2pm - 5pm

Symposium: "The Scientific Status of Parapsychological Research"
Chairman: I. P. Howard

In parapsychology there appears to be a chronic  polarization  of
rival views in a way that only occurs occasionally and briefly at
the frontiers of other kinds of scientific research. The  polari-
zation  consists of those who accept the validity of the reported
phenomena and of the theoretical framework  accounting  for  them
and those who do not. The following questions will be considered:
(1) Is the polarization merely a prejudice, or are  there  objec-
tive  characteristics  that set this field of research apart? (2)
Are there special problems with  furnishing  replicable  positive
evidence  in  this  area? (3) Are there logical problems with the
theoretical framework in which the research is  undertaken?   (4)
Are  there  statistical  problems  with the data-analysis and the
underlying assumptions? (5) Is there any possibility  of  resolu-
tion,  or will the field always continue to split among believers
and nonbelievers, and if the latter, (6)  what  does  that  imply
about  the  scientific  validity of this domain of inquiry? These
questions will be discussed, in  the  context  of  representative
current  experimental  work  in  parapsychological  research,  by
parapsychologists, skeptics and (as yet)  uncommitted  methodolo-
gists.

THE MANIFESTATIONS OF BIAS IN CRITICISM OF PARAPSYCHOLOGY (R.  L.
Morris)
PARAPSYCHOLOGY: WHERE IS THE PHENOMENON ABOUT WHICH  TO  BUILD  A
SCIENCE?   (J.E. Alcock)
AN EXPERIMENTALIST'S PERSPECTIVE ON THE  RESOLUTION  OF  THE  PSI
CONTROVERSY   (C. Honorton)
Discussants: K. Emmett, R. Hyman, M. Truzzi
------------------------------

(Parallel) Symposium: "The Ascription of Knowledge States to 
Children: Seeing, Believing and Knowing
Chairman: TBA

Considerable discussion in cognitive science surrounds the  issue
of the ascription of beliefs to animals, machines and young chil-
dren. Opinions range from that of Davidson, who argues  that  one
cannot  have  beliefs unless one has a concept of belief, to that
of Searle, who argues that "only someone in the grip of a  philo-
sophical  theory would deny that dogs and children have beliefs."
Recent research on children's ascription of beliefs to others and
to  themselves  in  the  interpretation of visual events may cast
some light on this question.

SEEING, THINKING AND KNOWING: ON THE ASCRIPTION OF MENTAL  STATES
TO CHILDREN   (D.R. Olson & J.W. Astington)
THE APPEARANCE/REALITY DISTINCTION  AND  CONCEPTUAL  PERSPECTIVE-
TAKING   (M. Taylor & J. H. Flavell)
IGNORANCE VERSUS FALSE BELIEF: A DEVELOPMENTAL LAG  IN  EPISTEMIC
STATE ATTRIBUTION   (J. Perner & H. Wimmer)
Discussants: F. Dretske, S. Kuczaj
_________________________________________________________________

	Saturday 18 May: 7pm - 10pm

Symposium: "Interpretation Versus Explanation  in  Cognitive  and
Social Theory"
Chairman: A. Grunbaum

The following questions will be considered: (1) What is an expla-
nation,  and  is  "scientific"  explanation an atypical case or a
paradigmatic one? (2) What is the role of testability and  falsi-
fiability  in explanation? (3) What is the role of considerations
of satisfyingness, coherence, elegance and other subjective  cri-
teria  in explanation? (4) Are there different explanatory metho-
dologies in the natural sciences and ther "human"  sciences?  (5)
Is  there an objective way to choose among rival interpretations?
(Should there be? Is there one in the case  of  rival  scientific
theories?) (6) Is there anything objective to replace the outmod-
ed "positivistic" stereotype? Pro  and  antihermeneuticists  will
participate  and  the  discussion  will  focus on the role of in-
terpretation in psychological and social scientific theory.

TOWARDS AN INTERPRETIVE PSYCHOLOGY   (E.V. Sullivan)
INTERPRETATION IN PERCEPTION   (G. Nicholson)
EMOTION AS A MATRIX FOR INTERPRETATION   (R. de Sousa)
Discussants: S. Harnad, A. Rosenberg, R. Woolfolk