J Storrs Hall, PhD wrote:
On Monday 22 October 2007 02:54:53 pm, Richard Loosemore wrote:
the question is how it can represent multiple
copies of a concept that occur in a situation without getting confused
about which is which. If the appearance of one chair in a scene causes
the [chair] neuron (or neurons, if they are a cluster) to fire, then
what happens when you walk into a chair factory?
Attention -- fovea -- saccade -- serial -- chunking -- frame.
Those higher functions have to be there anyway. Is there any evidence that we
can recognize multiple primitives simultaneously?
Josh
Did you ever try to parse a sentence with more than one noun in it?
Well, all right: but please be assured that the rest of us do in fact
do that.
Richard Loosemore
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