[ont.events] SUNY Buffalo Cognitive Science Colloquium

rapaport@cs.Buffalo.EDU (William J. Rapaport) (04/05/89)

                         UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
                      STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

   GRADUATE RESEARCH INITIATIVE IN COGNITIVE AND LINGUISTIC SCIENCES

                                PRESENTS

                              LARRY COPES

           Institute for the Study of Educational Mathematics
            and Department of Mathematics & Computer Science
                            Augsburg College
                                  and
    Department of Electrical Engineering and Artificial Intelligence
                          Tuskegee University

              THE PERRY SCHEME OF INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENT

William Perry's scheme of moral and intellectual development  postulates
a sequence of "positions" that college students move through, reflecting
their developing attitudes towards knowledge.  The positions range  from
"Basic  Duality"-all  problems  are  solvable;  the student's task is to
learn the right solutions-through "Contextual Relativism"-all  knowledge
is  disconnected  from  any  concept of absolute truth, though there are
standards that theories must  adhere  to-to  "Developing  Commitment"-in
which it is seen that one must retrace the whole journey over and over.

Dr. Copes, who is the former coordinator of the  "Perry  Network",  will
discuss the scheme, some applications of AI to understanding it, and its
relevance to cognitive science.

                         Monday, April 10, 1989
                               4:00 P.M.
                     109 Knox Hall, Amherst Campus

            There will be an evening discussion at 8:00 P.M.
                     at a location to be announced.

Contact Bill Rapaport, Dept.  of  Computer  Science,  716-636-3193,  for
further information.

rapaport@cs.Buffalo.EDU (William J. Rapaport) (12/01/89)

                              SUNY Buffalo
                      Center for Cognitive Science

                                presents

                            CHARLES O. FRAKE

                       Samuel P. Capen Professor
                       Department of Anthropology
                              SUNY Buffalo

                    WHERE DO DIRECTIONS COME FROM?
        FROM INFORMATION PROCESSING TO THE DISPLAY OF KNOWLEDGE
                   IN REAL-WORLD SPATIAL ORIENTATION

Attempts to understand ethnographic and historical data on diverse mari-
time  navigational  systems have uncovered several curious puzzles whose
solution requires attention to some major problems confronting all  stu-
dents  of  human cognition.  These problems concern mental models, their
representations,  technological  embodiments,  ecological  applications,
social  uses,  and  cultural  sources.   A  discussion of these problems
informs the larger issue of identifying the sources  of  uniformity  and
variation in human cognitive systems.  It also makes an argument for the
practicality and utility  (and  enjoyment)  of  investigations  of  non-
artificial intelligence.

                       Thursday, December 7, 1989
                               4:00 P.M.
                      280 Park Hall, Amherst Campus

For further information, contact Erwin Segal, Department of  Psychology,
716-636-3675, segal@cs.buffalo.edu, or William J. Rapaport, Department of
Computer Science, 716-636-3193, rapaport@cs.buffalo.edu