What does semantic tiling of the cortex tell us about semantics?

被引:23
|
作者
Barsalou, Lawrence W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Glasgow, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland
关键词
Semantics; Conceptual processing; Neural encoding and decoding; Multi-voxel pattern analysis; Explanatory levels; Cognitive mechanisms; INTERACTIVE ACTIVATION MODEL; BRAIN ACTIVITY; SITUATED CONCEPTUALIZATION; NEURAL REPRESENTATIONS; PERCEPTUAL SIMULATION; FACIAL EXPRESSIONS; PERSONAL SEMANTICS; PROACTIVE BRAIN; TEMPORAL-LOBE; CONTEXT;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2017.04.011
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Recent use of voxel-wise modeling in cognitive neuroscience suggests that semantic maps tile the cortex. Although this impressive research establishes distributed cortical areas active during the conceptual processing that underlies semantics, it tells us little about the nature of this processing. While mapping concepts between Man's computational and implementation levels to support neural encoding and decoding, this approach ignores Mares algorithmic level, central for understanding the mechanisms that implement cognition, in general, and conceptual processing, in particular. Following decades of research in cognitive science and neuroscience, what do we know so far about the representation and processing mechanisms that implement conceptual abilities? Most basically, much is known about the mechanisms associated with: (1) feature and frame representations, (2) grounded, abstract, and linguistic representations, (3) knowledge-based inference, (4) concept composition, and (5) conceptual flexibility. Rather than explaining these fundamental representation and processing mechanisms, semantic tiles simply provide a trace of their activity over a relatively short time period within a specific learning context. Establishing the mechanisms that implement conceptual processing in the brain will require more than mapping it to cortical (and sub-cortical) activity, with process models from cognitive science likely to play central roles in specifying the intervening mechanisms. More generally, neuroscience will not achieve its basic goals until it establishes algorithmic-level mechanisms that contribute essential explanations to how the brain works, going beyond simply establishing the brain areas that respond to various task conditions.
引用
收藏
页码:18 / 38
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] What does spatial alternation tell us about retrosplenial cortex function?
    Nelson, Andrew J. D.
    Powell, Anna L.
    Holmes, Joshua D.
    Vann, Seralynne D.
    Aggleton, John P.
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2015, 9
  • [2] What embedded counterfactuals tell us about the semantics of attitudes
    Haslinger, Nina
    Schmitt, Viola
    [J]. LINGUISTICS VANGUARD, 2022, 8 : 469 - 478
  • [3] What does neuroimaging tell us about the role of prefrontal cortex in memory retrieval?
    Buckner, RL
    Petersen, SE
    [J]. SEMINARS IN THE NEUROSCIENCES, 1996, 8 (01): : 47 - 55
  • [4] What Does the Sky Tell Us about the Camera?
    Lalonde, Jean-Franqois
    Narasimhan, Srinivasa G.
    Efros, Alexei A.
    [J]. COMPUTER VISION - ECCV 2008, PT IV, PROCEEDINGS, 2008, 5305 : 354 - +
  • [5] What does DVCS tell us about GPDs?
    Freund, A
    McDermott, M
    Strikman, M
    [J]. NUCLEAR PHYSICS A, 2002, 711 : 186C - 189C
  • [6] WHAT DOES GRAMMAR TELL US ABOUT ACTION?
    Couper-Kuhlen, Elizabeth
    [J]. PRAGMATICS, 2014, 24 (03): : 623 - 647
  • [7] WHAT DOES HALOBACTERIUM TELL US ABOUT PHOTORECEPTION
    HILDEBRAND, E
    [J]. BIOPHYSICS OF STRUCTURE AND MECHANISM, 1977, 3 (01): : 69 - 77
  • [8] What Planck does not tell us about inflation
    Elliston, Joseph
    Mulryne, David
    Tavakol, Reza
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW D, 2013, 88 (06):
  • [9] WHAT DOES HANDWRITING TELL US ABOUT PERSONALITY
    LOEWENTHAL, K
    [J]. NEW SOCIETY, 1980, 51 (910): : 544 - 546
  • [10] WHAT DOES PROTEOMICS TELL US ABOUT SCHIZOPHRENIA?
    Martins-de-Souza, Daniel
    Gattaz, Wagner F.
    Schmitt, Andrea
    Maccarrone, Giuseppina
    Falkai, Peter
    Bahn, Sabine
    Dias-Neto, Emmanuel
    Turck, Chris W.
    [J]. SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN, 2011, 37 : 116 - 117