Computational Explorations in Cognitive Neuroscience: Understanding the Mind by Simulating the Brain
By (Author) Randall C. O'Reilly
By (author) Yuko Munakata
Foreword by James L. McClelland
MIT Press Ltd
MIT Press
28th August 2000
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Neurology and clinical neurophysiology
Cognition and cognitive psychology
Psychological theory, systems, schools and viewpoints
Physiological and neuro-psychology, biopsychology
3D graphics and modelling
612.820113
Paperback
532
Width 203mm, Height 229mm, Spine 32mm
1157g
The goal of computational cognitive neuroscience is to understand how the brain embodies the mind by using biologically based computational models comprising networks of neuronlike units. This text, based on a course taught by Randall O'Reilly and Yuko Munakata over the past several years, provides an in-depth introduction to the main ideas in the field. The neural units in the simulations use equations based directly on the ion channels that govern the behaviour of real neurons, and the neural networks incorporate anatomical and physiological properties of the neocortex. Thus the text provides the student with knowledge of the basic biology of the brain as well as the computational skills needed to simulate large-scale cognitive phenomena. The text consists of two parts. The first part covers basic neural computation mechanisms: individual neurons, neural networks and learning mechanisms. The second part covers large-scale brain area organization and cognitive phenomena: perception and attention, memory, language and higher-level cognition. The second part is relatively self-contained and can be used separately for mechanistically oriented cognitive neuroscience courses. Integrated throughout the text are more than 40 different simulation models, many of them full-scale research-grade models, with friendly interfaces and accompanying exercises. The simulation software (PDP++, available for all major platforms) and simulations can be downloaded free of charge from the Web. Exercise solutions are available, and the text includes full information on the software.
James L. McClelland is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Center for Mind, Brain, and Computation at Stanford University. He is the coauthor of Parallel Distributed Processing (1986) and Semantic Cognition (2004), both published by the MIT Press. With David E. Rumelhart, he was awarded the 2002 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for Psychology for his work in the field of cognitive neuroscience on a cognitive framework called parallel distributed processing and the concept of connectionism.