LEADER 02344nam a2200301 i 4500001 99127979031206421 005 20230206114858.0 006 m o d 007 cr ||||||||||| 008 230206s2021 flu o 000 0 eng d 020 1-351-04352-8 035 (CKB)5600000000001425 035 (NjHacI)995600000000001425 035 (EXLCZ)995600000000001425 040 NjHacI |beng |erda |cNjHacl 050 4 QP360.5 |b.M387 2021 082 04 612.8233 |223 100 1 Maurer, Harald, |eauthor. 245 10 Cognitive Science : |bintegrative synchronization mechanisms in cognitive neuroarchitectures of modern connectionism / |cHarald Maurer. 264 1 Boca Raton : |bCRC Press, |c2021. 300 1 online resource (xvii, 381 pages) 336 text |btxt |2rdacontent 337 computer |bc |2rdamedia 338 online resource |bcr |2rdacarrier 588 Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources. 520 "The Mind/Brain may be considered as one and the same nonlinear, complex dynamical system, in which information processing can be described with vector and tensor transformations and with attractors in multidimensional state spaces. Thus, an internal neurocognitive representation concept consists of a dynamical process which filters out statistical prototypes from the sensorial information in terms of coherent and adaptive n-dimensional vector fields. These prototypes serve as a basis for dynamic, probabilistic predictions or probabilistic hypotheses on prospective new data (see the recently introduced approach of "predictive coding" in neurophilosophy). Furthermore, the phenomenon of sensory and language cognition would thus be based on a multitude of self-regulatory complex dynamics of synchronous self-organization mechanisms, in other words, an emergent "flux equilibrium process" ("steady state") of the total collective and coherent neural activity resulting from the oscillatory actions of neuronal assemblies. In perception it is shown how sensory object informations, like the object color or the object form, can be dynamically related together or can be integrated to a neurally based representation of this perceptual object by means of a synchronization mechanism ("feature binding")"-- Provided by publisher. 650 0 Cognitive neuroscience. 650 0 Cognitive science. 776 |z1-138-48708-2 906 BOOK