Results for 'Dr Liane M. Gabora'

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  1.  32
    Creative thought as a non-Darwinian evolutionary process.Dr Liane M. Gabora - 2005 - [Journal (Paginated)] (in Press).
    Selection theory requires multiple, distinct, simultaneously-actualized states. In cognition, each thought or cognitive state changes the 'selection pressure' against which the next is evaluated; they are not simultaneously selected amongst. Creative thought is more a matter of honing in a vague idea through redescribing successive iterations of it from different real or imagined perspectives; in other words, actualizing potential through exposure to different contexts. It has been proven that the mathematical description of contextual change of state introduces a non-Kolmogorovian probability (...)
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  2.  49
    The birth of an idea.Liane M. Gabora - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (3):543-543.
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  3.  31
    Cultural learning as the transmission mechanism in an evolutionary process.Liane M. Gabora - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (3):519-519.
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  4.  27
    Toward a theory of creative inklings.Liane M. Gabora - 1995 - In L. Gabora, [Book Chapter].
    It is perhaps not so baffling that we have the ability to develop, refine, and manifest a creative idea, once it has been conceived. But what sort of a system could spawn the initial seed of creativity from which an idea grows? This paper looks at how the mind is structured in such a way that we can experience a glimmer of insight or inkling of artistic inspiration.
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  5.  51
    Cultural transitions occur when mind parasites learn new tricks.Liane M. Gabora - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (4):760-761.
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  6.  37
    An Autocatalytic Network Model of Conceptual Change.Liane Gabora, Nicole M. Beckage & Mike Steel - 2022 - Topics in Cognitive Science 14 (1):163-188.
    Topics in Cognitive Science, Volume 14, Issue 1, Page 163-188, January 2022.
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  7.  29
    A cognitive transition underlying both technological and social aspects of cumulative culture.Liane Gabora & Cameron M. Smith - 2020 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 43:e163.
    The argument that cumulative technological culture originates in technical-reasoning skills is not the only alternative to social accounts; another possibility is that accumulation ofbothtechnical-reasoning skillsandenhanced social skills stemmed from the onset of a more basic cognitive ability such as recursive representational redescription. The paper confuses individual learning of pre-existing information with creative generation of new information.
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  8.  17
    A Comparative Study on College Vocal Teaching and Performance in China and Holland: A Case Study of the Teaching Model at Holland's ArtEZ Institute of the Arts.M. O. Cheng-Lian - 2011 - Journal of Aesthetic Education (Misc) 2:012.
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  9.  39
    Vitalisme en Mechanisme.Dr W. M. Kruseman - 1936 - Synthese 1 (1):21-24.
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  10.  37
    De strijd der wijsbegeerte tegen de argeloosheid.Dr H. M. J. Oldewelt - 1936 - Synthese 1 (1):371-376.
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  11.  47
    De Historie van Het Vitalisme.Dr W. M. Kruseman - 1937 - Synthese 2 (1):185-188.
  12.  43
    De „Gestalt”-theorie van Köhler.Dr W. M. Kruseman - 1936 - Synthese 1 (1):355-360.
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  13.  33
    Modeling a Cognitive Transition at the Origin of Cultural Evolution Using Autocatalytic Networks.Liane Gabora & Mike Steel - 2020 - Cognitive Science 44 (9):e12878.
    Autocatalytic networks have been used to model the emergence of self‐organizing structure capable of sustaining life and undergoing biological evolution. Here, we model the emergence of cognitive structure capable of undergoing cultural evolution. Mental representations (MRs) of knowledge and experiences play the role of catalytic molecules, and interactions among them (e.g., the forging of new associations) play the role of reactions and result in representational redescription. The approach tags MRs with their source, that is, whether they were acquired through social (...)
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  14.  27
    Section.Prof Dr Tadeusz M. Jaroszewski - 1977 - Dialectics and Humanism 4 (4):28-30.
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  15.  28
    Le Fond Psychologique De La Philosophie Bergsonienne.Dr H. M. J. Oldewelt - 1938 - Synthese 3 (1):99-101.
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  16.  24
    In defence of philosophy in schools.Dr P. M. Ward - 1983 - British Journal of Educational Studies 31 (3):252-264.
  17.  52
    Prikkelverschijnselen bij Plant, Dier en Mensch.Dr W. M. Kruseman - 1936 - Synthese 1 (1):118-120.
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  18.  67
    Five Clarifications about Cultural Evolution.Liane Gabora - 2011 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 11 (1-2):61-83.
    This paper reviews and clarifies five misunderstandings about cultural evolution identified by Henrich et al.. First, cultural representations are neither discrete nor continuous; they are distributed across neurons that respond to microfeatures. This enables associations to be made, and cultural change to be generated. Second, ‘replicator dynamics’ do not ensure natural selection. The replicator notion does not capture the distinction between actively interpreted self-assembly code and passively copied self-description, which leads to a fundamental principle of natural selection: inherited information is (...)
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  19.  74
    GAS doesn't “turn the engine” when states are sequential or context-dependent.Liane Gabora - 2004 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (6):901-902.
    Selection theory requires multiple, simultaneously-actualized states. In cognition, each thought changes the “selection pressure” against which the next is evaluated; they are not simultaneously selected amongst. Cognitive change occurs not through selection among discrete “neural configurations,” but through interaction between conceptual web and context. This introduces a non-Kolmogorovian probability distribution, hence a classical formalism (e.g., selection theory) cannot be used.
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  20.  45
    Concept combination and the origins of complex cognition.Liane Gabora & Kirsty Kitto - 2012 - In Liz Swan, Origins of Mind. New York: Springer Verlag. pp. 361--381.
  21. Contextualizing concepts using a mathematical generalization of the quantum formalism.Liane Gabora & Diederik Aerts - 2002 - Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence 14 (4):327-358.
    We outline the rationale and preliminary results of using the State Context Property (SCOP) formalism, originally developed as a generalization of quantum mechanics, to describe the contextual manner in which concepts are evoked, used, and combined to generate meaning. The quantum formalism was developed to cope with problems arising in the description of (1) the measurement process, and (2) the generation of new states with new properties when particles become entangled. Similar problems arising with concepts motivated the formal treatment introduced (...)
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  22.  49
    Epigenetic and cultural evolution are non-Darwinian.Liane Gabora - 2007 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 30 (4):371-371.
    The argument that heritable epigenetic change plays a distinct role in evolution would be strengthened through recognition that it is what bootstrapped the origin and early evolution of life, and that, like behavioral and symbolic change, it is non-Darwinian. The mathematics of natural selection, a population-level process, is limited to replication with negligible individual-level change that uses a self-assembly code.
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  23.  2
    The Relationship between the Actual Implementation of the "English for Iraq" Curriculum and Teachers' Intentions, and Perceptions in Iraqi EFL Preparatory Schools.Zainab A. Albayati, Albayati & Dr Muna M. Abbas Al-Khateeb - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:505-528.
    This study investigates the intentions, perceptions, and actual implementation of an innovative English curriculum among preparatory school EFL teachers in Iraq. The research recognizes the growing importance of English globally and Iraq's efforts to enhance English language education and implement an appropriate innovative curriculum. However, the implementation of a new curriculum poses significant challenges related to teachers' knowledge, intention, and academic culture. The study focuses on understanding the relationship between curriculum intentions, teachers' perceptions, and the actual implementation of the curriculum. (...)
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  24.  22
    The allure of the unknown in a tamed, mapped, and homogenized world.Liane Gabora & Isabel Gomez - 2022 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45:e282.
    As the physical world becomes tamed and mapped out, opportunities to experience the unknown become rarer; imaginary worlds provide a much-needed sense of potentiality. Potentiality is central to the Self-Other Re-organization theory of cultural evolution, which postulates that creativity fuels cumulative cultural change. We point to evidence that fear affects, not the magnitude of exploration, but how cautiously it proceeds.
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  25. The cultural evolution of socially situated cognition.Liane Gabora - manuscript
    Because human cognition is creative and socially situated, knowledge accumulates, diffuses, and gets applied in new contexts, generating cultural analogs of phenomena observed in population genetics such as adaptation and drift. It is therefore commonly thought that elements of culture evolve through natural selection. However, natural selection was proposed to explain how change accumulates despite lack of inheritance of acquired traits, as occurs with template-mediated replication. It cannot accommodate a process with significant retention of acquired or horizontally (e.g. socially) transmitted (...)
     
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  26. Conceptual closure: How memories are woven into an interconnected worldview.Liane Gabora - unknown
    This paper describes a tentative model for how discrete memories transform into an interconnected conceptual network, or worldview, wherein relationships between memories are forged by way of abstractions. The model draws on Kauffman’s theory of how an information-evolving system could emerge through the formation and closure of an autocatalytic network. Here, the information units are not catalytic molecules, but memories and abstractions, and the process that connects them is not catalysis but reminding events (i.e. one memory evokes another). The result (...)
     
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  27. Ideas are not replicators but minds are.Liane Gabora - 2004 - Biology and Philosophy 19 (1):127-143.
    An idea is not a replicator because it does not consist of coded self-assembly instructions. It may retain structure as it passes from one individual to another, but does not replicate it. The cultural replicator is not an idea but an associatively-structured network of them that together form an internal model of the world, or worldview. A worldview is a primitive, uncoded replicator, like the autocatalytic sets of polymers widely believed to be the earliest form of life. Primitive replicators generate (...)
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  28.  59
    A Day in the Life of a Meme.Liane Gabora - 1996 - Philosophica 57 (1):53-90.
    Like the information patterns that evolve through. biological processes, mental representations or memes evolve through adaptive exploration and transformation of an information space through variation, selection, and transmission. However since memes do not contain instructions for their replication our brains do it for them, strategically, guided by a fitness landscape that reflects both internal drives and a worldview that forms through meme assimilation. This paper presents a tentative model for how an individual becomes a meme evolving agent via the emergence (...)
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  29. Revenge of the 'neurds': Characterizing creative thought in terms of the structure and dynamics of memory.Liane Gabora - unknown
    Empirical results suggest that defocusing attention results in primary process or associative thought, conducive to finding unusual connections, while focusing attention results in secondary process or analytic thought, conducive to rule-based operations. Creativity appears to involve both. It is widely believed that it is possible to escape mental fixation by spontaneously and temporarily engaging in a more divergent or associative mode of thought. The resulting insight may be refined in a more analytic mode of thought. The question addressed here is: (...)
     
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  30. Concepts and Their Dynamics: A Quantum‐Theoretic Modeling of Human Thought.Diederik Aerts, Liane Gabora & Sandro Sozzo - 2013 - Topics in Cognitive Science 5 (4):737-772.
    We analyze different aspects of our quantum modeling approach of human concepts and, more specifically, focus on the quantum effects of contextuality, interference, entanglement, and emergence, illustrating how each of them makes its appearance in specific situations of the dynamics of human concepts and their combinations. We point out the relation of our approach, which is based on an ontology of a concept as an entity in a state changing under influence of a context, with the main traditional concept theories, (...)
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  31.  29
    Seance du 31 Mai 1930. La psychologie animale.A. Durand, Maurice Blondel, M. Durand, M. Janot, M. Paliard, M. Segond, Mme Waitz, M. Bourgarel, M. Urtin, M. Padova, Dr Cassoute, M. Berger & Dr Chevalier - 1930 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 4 (2/3):116 - 125.
  32.  34
    Complexity from theory to practise: An interview with Bruce sawhill. [REVIEW]Liane Gabora - 1999 - Foundations of Science 4 (1):95-105.
  33.  73
    Contextualizing concepts.Liane Gabora & Diederik Aerts - unknown
    To cope with problems arising in the description of (1) contextual interactions, and (2) the generation of new states with new properties when quantum entities become entangled, the mathematics of quantum mechanics was developed. Similar problems arise with concepts. We use a generalization of standard quantum mechanics, the mathematical lattice theoretic formalism, to develop a formal description of the contextual manner in which concepts are evoked, used, and combined to generate meaning.
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  34. Self-other organization: Why early life did not evolve through natural selection.Liane Gabora - manuscript
    The improbability of a spontaneously generated self-assembling molecule has suggested that life began with a set of simpler, collectively replicating elements, such as an enclosed autocatalytic set of polymers (or autocell). Since replication occurs without a self-assembly code, acquired characteristics are inherited. Moreover, there is no strict distinction between alive and dead; one can only infer that an autocell was alive if it replicates. These features of early life render natural selection inapplicable to the description of its change-of-state because they (...)
     
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  35. Amplifying phenomenal information: Toward a fundamental theory of consciousness.Liane Gabora - 2002 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (8):3-29.
    from non-conscious components by positing that consciousness is a universal primitive. For example, the double aspect theory of information holds that infor- mation has a phenomenal aspect. How then do you get from phenomenal infor- mation to human consciousness? This paper proposes that an entity is conscious to the extent it amplifies information, first by trapping and integrating it through closure, and second by maintaining dynamics at the edge of chaos through simul- taneous processes of divergence and convergence. The origin (...)
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  36.  61
    Concept combination and the origins of complex cognition.Liane Gabora & Kirsty Kitto - 2012 - In Liz Swan, Origins of Mind. New York: Springer Verlag. pp. 361--381.
  37. Evolution as context-driven actualization of potential: Toward an interdisciplinary theory of change of state.Liane Gabora - manuscript
    It is increasingly evident that there is more to biological evolution than natural selection; moreover, the concept of evolution is not limited to biology. We propose an integrative framework for characterizing how entities evolve, in which evolution is viewed as a process of context-driven actualization of potential (CAP). Processes of change differ according to the degree of nondeterminism, and the degree to which they are sensitive to, internalize, and depend upon a particular context. The approach enables us to embed phenomena (...)
     
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  38.  43
    Quantum structure and human thought.Diederik Aerts, Jan Broekaert, Liane Gabora & Sandro Sozzo - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (3):274-276.
    We support the authors' claims, except that we point out that also quantum structure different from quantum probability abundantly plays a role in human cognition. We put forward several elements to illustrate our point, mentioning entanglement, contextuality, interference, and emergence as effects, and states, observables, complex numbers, and Fock space as specific mathematical structures.
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  39.  18
    Ignoring the role of reiterative processing and worldview transformation leads to exaggeration of the role of curiosity in creativity.Liane Gabora, Kirthana Ganesh & Iana Bashmakova - 2024 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 47:e98.
    The Novelty-Seeking Model does not address the iterative nature of creativity, and how it restructures one's worldview, resulting in overemphasis on the role of curiosity, and underemphasis on inspiration and perseverance. It overemphasizes the product; creators often seek merely to express themselves or figure out or come to terms with something. We point to inconsistencies regarding divergent and convergent thought.
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  40.  1
    The cognitive and evolutionary science of behavioural modernity goes beyond material chronology.Andoni S. E. Sergiou & Liane Gabora - 2025 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 48:e16.
    Stibbard-Hawkes' taphonomic findings are valuable, and his call for caution warranted, but the hazards he raises are being mitigated by a multi-pronged approach; current research on behavioural/cognitive modernity is not based solely on material chronology. Theories synthesize data from archaeology, anthropology, psychology, neuroscience, and genetics, and predictions arising from these theories are tested with mathematical and agent-based models.
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  41.  40
    A cross-disciplinary framework for the description of contextually mediated change.Liane Gabora & Diederik Aerts - 2008 - In World Scientific, Physics of Emergence and Organization. pp. 109--134.
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  42.  24
    Arxiv.Org > nlin > arxiv:Nlin/0512025.Liane Gabora - manuscript
    The improbability of a spontaneously generated self-assembling molecule has suggested that life began with a set of simpler, collectively replicating elements, such as an enclosed autocatalytic set of polymers (or protocell). Since replication occurs without a self-assembly code, acquired characteristics are inherited. Moreover, there is no strict distinction between alive and dead; one can only infer that a protocell was alive if it replicates. These features of early life render natural selection inapplicable to the description of its change-of-state because they (...)
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  43.  40
    Grounded in perceptions yet transformed into amodal symbols.Liane Gabora - 1999 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (4):617-617.
    Amodality is not incompatible with being originally derived from sensory experience. The transformation of perceptual symbols into amodal abstractions could take place spontaneously through self-organizing processes such as autocatalysis. The organizational role played by “simulators” happens implicitly in a neural network, and quite possibly, in the brain as well.
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  44. Lanl.arxiv.Org > q-bio > arxiv:Q-bio/0402002.Liane Gabora - manuscript
    An idea is not a replicator because it does not consist of coded self-assembly instructions. It may retain structure as it passes from one individual to another, but does not replicate it. The cultural replicator is not an idea but an associatively-structured network of them that together form an internal model of the world, or worldview. A worldview is a primitive, uncoded replicator, like the autocatalytic sets of polymers widely believed to be the earliest form of life. Primitive replicators generate (...)
     
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  45.  46
    Mikrotubule, anestetyki i świadomość kwantowa: wywiad ze Stuartem Hameroffem [wywiad].Liane Gabora - 2001 - Zagadnienia Filozoficzne W Nauce 29.
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  46.  35
    Physical Light as a Metaphor for Inner Light.Liane Gabora - 2014 - Aisthesis: Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 7 (2):43-61.
    The metaphor between physical light and inner light has a long history that permeates diverse languages and cultures. This paper outlines a system for using basic principles from optics to visually represent psychological states and processes, such as ideation, enlightenment, mindfulness, and fragmentation versus integrity, as well as situations that occur between people involving phenomena such as honest versus deceptive communication, and understanding versus misunderstanding. The paper summarizes two ongoing projects based on this system: The ‘Light and Enlightenment” art installation (...)
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  47. The complex matters of the mind.Liane Gabora - 2000 - Foundations of Science 5:391-393.
  48.  46
    The interwoven conceptual matrix of the cultural replicator.Liane Gabora - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (1):152-153.
    The capacity for flexible niche construction increases suddenly and dramatically when discrete memories and sensorimotor associations become woven into an interconnected worldview. Ontogenetic learning is as vital to culture as social learning because it is the wellspring of cultural novelty. Human altruism may result from pressures exerted at the level of cultural rather than biological replicators.
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  49.  17
    Modeling Discontinuous Cultural Evolution: The Impact of Cross-Domain Transfer.Kirthana Ganesh & Liane Gabora - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    This paper uses autocatalytic networks to model discontinuous cultural transitions involving cross-domain transfer, using as an illustrative example, artworks inspired by the oldest-known uncontested example of figurative art: the carving of the Hohlenstein-Stadel Löwenmensch, or lion-human. Autocatalytic networks provide a general modeling setting in which nodes are not just passive transmitters of activation; they actively galvanize, or “catalyze” the synthesis of novel nodes from existing ones This makes them uniquely suited to model how new structure grows out of earlier structure, (...)
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  50. Generalizing Prototype Theory: A Formal Quantum Framework.Diederik Aerts, Jan Broekaert, Liane Gabora & Sandro Sozzo - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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