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- Message-ID: <92Aug18.202950pdt.29192@hmmm.parc.xerox.com>
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- Date: Tue, 18 Aug 1992 20:29:45 PDT
- Sender: "Control Systems Group Network (CSGnet)" <CSG-L@UIUCVMD.BITNET>
- From: Penni Sibun <sibun@PARC.XEROX.COM>
- Subject: Drivers, cognition, & PCT and perception
- X-To: CSG-L%UIUCVMD.BITNET@pucc.princeton.edu
- In-Reply-To: "William T. Powers"'s message of Tue,
- 18 Aug 1992 10:01:59 -0700
- <92Aug18.100845pdt.11795@alpha.xerox.com>
- Lines: 145
-
- (penni sibun 920818.2000)
-
- [Mary Powers 920818]
-
- But interactive implies that
- the road is out there doing something to the driver, and it
- isn't, it's just lying there.
-
- the road may not be *doing* anything, but it's constantly changing,
- and it's an artifact--somebody designed it and built it--and these are
- important thing to know about it.
-
- Modelling your drive as a the action of a control system does
- seem hopelessly baroque at first glance. All this stuff going on.
- But this is where the hierarchical model comes in, to organize
- all that confusion.
-
- i am deeply suspicious of hierarchical organization from my experience
- in modelling language (as well as other behavior). language is
- supposed to have all sorts of hierarchy in it (eg, a text is composed
- of paragraphs are composed of sentences are composed of words) and i
- just don't think this is a very useful way of looking at language, and
- am working to show this.
-
- Customs are programs and sequences (signal
- for turns, drive on the right, stop at red lights) that satisfy
- principles (rules of the road) which are the means for keeping
- most drivers alive.
-
- i really can't imagine how a custom can be a program (in somebody's
- head). assuming it could be decomposed into a program, how does an
- individual introspect about it? how are customs passed on and
- maintained? how are they recorded? how are they incorporated into
- things like building (better) roads?
-
- Road construction - as I go I see that everything you
- name is either a perception like a bumpy road or snow, or a very
- high level abstraction like geography or weather.
-
- you and i are talking about weather in the abstract (and i believe i
- included it in the enumeration at the end of my story as a summary).
- when i am driving, snow on the road or rain on the windscreen is
- extremely immediate and concrete. i am not dealing w/ ``weather''
- when i'm driving, i'm dealing w/ this stuff that's in my face.
-
- I get the feeling that you don't like the idea that people are
- merely or only control systems.
-
- no. i don't have any particular emotional investment in what people
- are made of. i was the one who suggested it's all physics at the
- bottom.
-
- i am, as we all are who are engaged in this conversation, very
- concerned about trying to ask and answer the right questions.
-
- [From Rick Marken (920818)]
-
-
- >there's just tons of literature on
- >perception that suggest that perc. is a *lot* of work; in fact it
- > involves action--perhaps to the degree that p. and a. are inseparable.
- (``active vision'' is a current buzzphrase.)
-
- All the literature in the world won't convince me that I'm working hard as I
- glance around and perceive different aspects of the world (my neural
- networks may be computing some very complex functions of my sensory
- inputs, but it feels pretty effortless).
-
- i am quite confounded to hear this. you really think that how much
- work a process takes is determinable by introspection? that doesn't
- sound very scientific to me.
-
- I have to imagine that active vision is controlled visual variables--
- and it seems to be from your examples (like squinting to reduce glare).
- Maybe these active vision people are, indeed, doing PCT.
-
- i was using very gross examples, where i thought the work involved
- would be obvious, that is, it involves muscles, rather than primarily
- neurons. active vision folks actually focus more on where the work
- involved in perception is not as obvious as muscle movements (though
- it can light up half your brain on the scanners!). the paradigm
- example of this is object perception. going from the retinal map to
- seeing objects is not a higher cognitive function--the process of
- perceiving, even in the eye, never mind the brain, is extremely
- complex, and not at all a matter of passing an uninterpreted signal
- down the line. at least, so say the tons of literature, and our
- resident psychologist, whom i consulted just in case i had missed a
- major shift in the field.
-
- [From Rick Marken (920818.1300)]
-
- around that facilitates doing what needs to be done. The way I parse it,
- it sounds like you are saying that the environment (or our perception
- thereof) -- which is the stuff around-- guides (facilitates) behavior
- (what needs to be done).
-
- not really. remember, i started out denying that there was such a
- thing as an ``environment.'' and i also denied that there is a locus
- of control anywhere.
-
- as an aside, i don't think behavior is ``what *needs* to be done.'' i
- think it's what *is* done.
-
- This sounds like a verbal version of the sr
- explanation of behavior that you clain interactionism is not. Sayingthat
- we "lean on the world" doesn't help;
-
- we lean on the world, we lean on each other, the world leans on
- us--everything is incredibly well-connected and articulated.
-
- suppose I want to (need to) point
- straight forward? I can't lean on gravity to do that; if I lean on gravity
- I'll generally end up pointing down.
-
- what? ``leaning on the world'' is a metaphor; that's why it was in
- quotes.
-
- As Mary Powers pointed out, interacting suggests
- that the actor and environment are cooperating to produce what needs
- to get done.
-
- yup. cooperation doesn't imply intentionality. (or if it does,
- substitute ``work together'' or something.)
-
- But the enviroment doesn't care whether what needs to get
- done, gets done or not; the environment is just there, doing its own
- thing
-
- i'm not sure caring is germane, but interactionism doesn't have a
- concept of an ``environment'' that is an inert, alien (y'all keep say
- it's governed by physics and organisms aren't), thing. at it also
- isn't particularly concerned w/ intentionality--which you seem to be
- using to mean something very close to control.
-
- I think this is an important point. I think a number of people have a
- problem with this. I take it for granted that perception is just what
- afferent neural firing looks like when you are a brain (which we
- are).
-
- i am *not* a brain. and though i've never seen you, you certainly
- seem to be possessed of all the fingers and toes, as it were.
-
- cheers.
-
- --penni
-