This struck me as the right conclusion but the wrong reasoning.  Coding might 
be a bad metaphor for perception, but not because there is no structure in the 
input.  Do I misunderstand? 

Nick 

See below

Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology
Clark University
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Behavioral 
and Brain Sciences
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2019 4:59 PM
To: Nicholas S Thompson <[email protected]>
Subject: BBS Call for Commentary Proposals: Brette

Dear Dr. Thompson:

We are writing you to announce that BBS has just accepted an article for open 
peer commentary in BBS. The article was already reviewed, and we are now 
accepting commentary proposals. If you are interested in writing a commentary, 
you are welcome to submit a short proposal (see instructions below). No action 
is required if you aren't interested. 

Please DO NOT submit a full commentary article unless you are formally 
invited---AFTER you submit a commentary *proposal*. We will review all 
commentary proposals and issue invitations in April. Also, please be aware that 
we typically receive far more commentary proposals than we can accommodate with 
formal invitations. When choosing invitations, we balance over multiple 
factors, including the interest of the commentary itself, the commentator's 
expertise, whether the commentator's work has been discussed in the target 
article, and other considerations.

NOW PROCESSING COMMENTARY PROPOSALS ON:

Target Article: Is coding a relevant metaphor for the brain?

Authors: Romain Brette

Deadline for Commentary Proposals: Wednesday March 6, 2019

Abstract: "Neural coding" is a popular metaphor in neuroscience, where 
objective properties of the world are communicated to the brain in the form of 
spikes. Here I argue that this metaphor is often inappropriate and misleading. 
First, when neurons are said to encode experimental parameters, the neural code 
depends on experimental details that are not carried by the coding variable 
(e.g. the spike count). Thus, the representational power of neural codes is 
much more limited than generally implied. Second, neural codes carry 
information only by reference to things with known meaning. In contrast, 
perceptual systems must build information from relations between sensory 
signals and actions, forming an internal model. Neural codes are inadequate for 
this purpose because they are unstructured and therefore unable to represent 
relations. Third, coding variables are observables tied to the temporality of 
experiments, while spikes are timed actions that mediate coupling in a 
distributed dynamical system. The coding metaphor tries to fit the dynamic, 
circular and distributed causal structure of the brain into a linear chain of 
transformations between observables, but the two causal structures are 
incongruent. I conclude that the neural coding metaphor cannot provide a valid 
basis for theories of brain function, because it is incompatible with both the 
causal structure of the brain and the representational requirements of 
cognition. 

Keywords: neural coding; information; perception; sensorimotor; action


Download Target Article Preprint:   

(Depending on your browser, the PDF will either load in a separate window, from 
which you can download the PDF, or will download directly to your computer.) 

https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/D578626E4888193FFFAE5B6E2C37E052/S0140525X19000049a.pdf/is_coding_a_relevant_metaphor_for_the_brain.pdf


COMMENTARY PROPOSALS *MUST* INCLUDE THE FOLLOWING

1. Name of the target article for which you are submitting a commentary 
proposal. 

2. All authors, including any possible co-authors, listed at the top of your 
submission document.

3. What aspect of the target article or book you would anticipate commenting 
on. 

4. The relevant expertise you would bring to bear on the target article or book.

Please number these sections in your proposal: 1., 2., 3., 4.

EDITORS' NOTES ON WRITING YOUR PROPOSAL

In addition to the open "Call for Commentary Proposals," we invite commentators 
who do not submit proposals—these include reviewers of the paper, scholars 
whose work is discussed in the paper, and commentators suggested by the 
authors. (Obviously, these can be overlapping sets.) Once we subtract this set, 
only about 20 submitted proposals from the Call for Commentary Proposals can be 
invited to write a commentary. 

Commentary selection is necessarily multifactorial. It must be balanced to a 
degree across the various fields of cognitive science, point of view of the 
article, and several other aspects of academic diversity. The number of 
proposals can vary widely, however, depending on the topic, the range is from 
15 to 150! In the latter case, when we can accept only a little over 1 in 10 of 
the proposals, a few things will facilitate a positive reading of a proposal, 
and hopefully acceptance, given the constraints:

1. The proposal for the commentary should not be longer than the commentary, 
1,000 words. 100-500 is optimal, and we value succinctness.  On the other hand, 
"I intend to comment on X aspect of the target article" is not enough.  Are you 
for it, against it, or extending it?   

2. Under no circumstances should proposers simply write a commentary and submit 
it to us.
 
3. Proposers should clearly state what aspect of the target article they intend 
to comment on.  It's quite obvious when proposers are using the commentary 
forum only to promote their own research and not engage with the target 
article. Such proposals are routinely declined.

4. Concerning "the relevant expertise you would bring to bear": While the 
editors have a generally good idea of who is active in the fields of the target 
article, we must cover a wide range and may be unaware of the people who have 
been most productive and influential in a given area, or the scholars who have 
engaged in heated debate with the authors in the past. So, the editors will be 
greatly helped if every proposer states their position in the field and lists 
between 2-10 relevant publications, again succinctly. On the other side of the 
spectrum, under no circumstances should an entire CV be included.

5. BUT … it's not all about articles previously published, or position in the 
field. It's not necessary to have published in the area, and it's not necessary 
to have a current academic appointment.  We make efforts to include proposals 
coming both from established figures and total newcomers. An engaging idea 
elicited by the article, an illuminating application of the target article 
concept to an allied field, or a truly clever riposte is often all that's 
needed. 

6. Being a co-author on multiple proposals directed to one target article will 
almost certainly remove one set of your co-authors or the other from contention 
altogether, which will put you in an unpleasant game theoretic situation with 
your colleagues. Do this carefully, if at all.

7. We make our choices mostly on quality and fit, but we do want to open up BBS 
to as many individuals as possible. If you've written one or more other 
commentaries recently, your odds of having another one accepted will 
correspondingly go down, though not to zero.

HOW TO SUBMIT A COMMENTARY PROPOSAL VIA THE ONLINE SUBMISSION SYSTEM

If you would like to nominate yourself for potential commentary invitation, you 
must submit a commentary proposal via our BBS Editorial Manager site:

1. Log-in to your BBS Editorial Manager account as an author:

http://www.editorialmanager.com/bbs

Username: NThompson-693
Password: You will also need to enter your password. If you have forgotten it, 
you may click Send Login Details. 

If you do not have an account, please visit the site and register. 

2. Submit New Manuscript

Within your author main menu please select Submit New Manuscript.

3. Select Article Type

Choose the article type of your manuscript from the pull-down menu. Commentary 
proposal article types are temporarily created for each accepted target article 
or book. Only select the commentary proposal article type that you wish to 
submit a proposal on. For example: "Commentary Proposal (Brette)"

4. Enter Title

Please title your proposal submission by indicating the relevant first author 
name of the target article or book. For example: "Commentary Proposal on Brette"

5. Add Co-Authors

If you are proposing to write a commentary with any co-authors, the system will 
not allow you to enter their information here. Instead, include their names at 
the top of the commentary proposal document you upload. These potential 
co-authors need not contribute to the commentary proposal itself.

6. Attach Files

The only required submission Item is your commentary proposal in .DOC(X) or 
.RTF format. In the description field please add the first author name of the 
target article or book. For example: "Commentary Proposal on Brette"

7. Approve Your Submission

Editorial Manager will process your commentary proposal submission and will 
create a PDF for your approval. On the "Submissions Waiting for Author's 
Approval" page, you can view your PDF, edit, approve, or remove the submission. 
(You might have to wait several minutes for the blue "Action" menu to appear, 
allowing you to approve.) Once you have Approved the Submission, the PDF will 
be sent to the editorial office. 

**It is VERY important that you check and approve your commentary proposal 
manuscript as described above. Otherwise, we cannot process your submission.**

8. Editorial Office Decision

At the conclusion of the commentary proposal period, the editors will review 
all the submitted commentary proposals. An undetermined number of commentary 
proposals will be approved and those author names will be added to the final 
commentary invitation list. At that time you will be notified of the decision. 
If you are formally invited to submit a commentary, you will be asked to 
confirm your intention to submit by the commentary deadline.

Note: Before the commentary invitations are sent, the copy-edited and revised 
target article will be posted for invitees. 

Please do not write a commentary unless you have received an official 
invitation!

BEING REMOVED FROM THE CALL EMAIL LIST

If you DO NOT wish to receive call for commentary proposals in the future, 
please reply to [email protected], and type "remove" in the subject line.

SUGGESTING COMMENTATORS AND NOMINATING BBS ASSOCIATES

To suggest others as possible commentators, or to nominate others for BBS 
Associateship status, please email [email protected]. 


Regards,

Gennifer Levey
Managing Editor, BBS
Cambridge University Press
[email protected]
http://journals.cambridge.org/bbs
http://bbs.edmgr.com/

__________________________________________________
In compliance with data protection regulations, you may request that we remove 
your personal registration details at any time.  (Use the following URL: 
https://www.editorialmanager.com/BBS/login.asp?a=r) Please contact the 
publication office if you have any questions.


============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
archives back to 2003: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/
FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ by Dr. Strangelove

Reply via email to