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Conceptual coordination bridges information processing and neurophysiology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 September 2001

William J. Clancey
Affiliation:
NASA/Ames Research Center, Computational Sciences Division, MIS 269-3, Moffett Field, CA 94035 bclancey@mail.arc.nasa.gov www.ic.arc.nasa.gov/ic/clancey.html

Abstract

Information processing theories of memory and skills can be reformulated in terms of how categories are physically and temporally related, a process called conceptual coordination. Dreaming can then be understood as a story-understanding process in which two mechanisms found in everyday comprehension are missing: conceiving sequences (chunking categories in time as a higher-order categorization) and coordinating across modalities (e.g., relating the sound of a word and the image of its meaning). On this basis, we can readily identify isomorphisms between dream phenomenology and neurophysiology, and explain the function of dreaming as facilitating future coordination of sequential, cross-modal categorization (i.e., REM sleep lowers activation thresholds, “unlearning”).

[Hobson et al.; Nielsen; Solms; Revonsuo; Vertes & Eastman]

Type
Brief Report
Copyright
© 2000 Cambridge University Press

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