Archive for March, 2009

Back & Forth

Friday, March 27th, 2009

The wind is periodically rushing past your ears. A bird is singing, the sun is shining. You close your eyes and keep moving in the same constant pattern, slowly climbing higher and higher, going faster and faster.

Once you are up, you are going back down, further back and up again; then forward and down and up again. You open your eyes, blinking try to make out the trees which appear to remain the only stable reference point. A row of houses is moving up into the sky, a car is going down the street while the street itself is repeatedly hiding behind the small hill in front of you. Your left foot, for no more than the very briefest glimpse, is touching the ground … up again!

You lean back, rushing forward, going down, then up, pause. You lean slightly forward, rush back down, go up again, turn and lean back. You throw back your head, see the sky, watch a cloud moving by, see the trees suddenly pass, face the ground, close your eyes and sit back up. Leaning forward a little you allow yourself being drawn back.

You are going down and up again; then forth and up and back and down and up – even once you stop moving you will keep going for a while.

The Big Question

Monday, March 16th, 2009

How do worlds build up inside our minds? – As an answer, I expect more than merely explaining how we visually perceive the scene in front of us, or reconstruct in front of our mind’s eye the object we are touching with our hands from the incoming tactile stimulation. My question is more complex.

Among the first things to find out, is, for sure, what it is that I call “world”. To give it a start, I might try describing it as “environments we experience”. When I go out, take my bike and ride to the grocery store, for instance, I do find myself within a world containing the house I live in, my family, the neighborhood I am riding through, the store I enter for shopping, so on and so forth. When I dream, I find myself in diverse situations, maybe on another planet or in another time. When I imagine future scenarios, vivid scenes are building up inside my head, I can watch them, manipulate them, act upon them. When I remember I recall—more or less accurately—past situations, past environments, and people I was in touch with around the time of memory. When I read a story about, say, wizards and witches, I can have them do magic, experience their joy and feel their pain. A similar thing holds for games and movies, though these worlds are not as much “inside my head” as the ones previously described (they are flickering on a screen instead). And, finally, worlds can be more abstracted away from our usual experience—e.g. if I try to solve a math problem and mentally rotate an n-dimensional sphere (not that I could).

All these are instances of what I take to be worlds; one thing special about the grocery shopping situation is this: we call it real. The major difference between the real world and other, so called imaginative, worlds is that it is thought of as a representation, an image, or a copy of the outer world, the environment we actually engage with. It perhaps deserves a special status in our minds since the real world is the one we all share. It is the one that can, contrary to all the others, be used as objective reference point (or at least we think so).

If we take the outer (real) world for granted (which I assume we should—but that discussion belongs elsewhere) then the question of how it makes its way inside our heads might be answered by investigating our perceptual apparatus. But, as already noted above, this is insufficient. What about all the other worlds? How do they come about? And, perhaps even more importantly, what distinguishes them—despite from having no currently externally present reference—from the mental copy of the real world? Is it even possible to make this distinction?

Related to these, further questions need to be considered. Among the most urgent ones are (1) What does such a world consist in? Can we talk about “images” or “representations” being “neurally coded” in brain tissue? If so, what makes our brains produce an imaginative world of trolls and wizards as opposed to one of dragons and unicorns? and (2) Once it is there, how does such a world change? How can I act within it? Why do things, say, move? This sort of change or manipulation of worlds might be what is commonly referred to as thinking. One might then ask further, are there, perhaps, necessary and sufficient conditions for thought? One difficulty is, however, to distinguish a merely observatory thought (e.g., seeing a squirrel run away or recalling the look of a person’s face) from one in which we actively engage with our environment (e.g., dreaming of climbing a rock). Both inevitably are cases of thought but only the latter obviously involves world-manipulation. Taking a closer look, I suspect, even cases of apparent observation will, after all, include some sort of manipulation.

Thus far, I have laid out some questions answering which—I hope—will be of help to eventually approach the big question. It is time then to ask who can provide answers. Scientist are researching in memory, visual processing, attention, conceptual schemes, empathy, the connection between mind and body, consciousness and a bunch of other phenomena. But how to put all this together? Will a philosophical, neuroscientific or psychological approach turn out most fertile? There is a lot more to be said here; for these paragraphs are only the gist of a giant puzzle.

“Das ist wie Fahrrad fahren, das verlernt man nicht.”

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

– Irgendwie bist du von dieser Aussage noch nicht so ganz überzeugt; immerhin ist es ja schon über ein Jahr her.

Ihr haltet in der Mitte, du stellt die Bügel ein und prüfst den Gurt. Alles fühlt sich normal an, auch Putzen und Satteln liefen völlig automatisch. Ein bisschen aufgeregt bist du jetzt trotzdem. Die anderen kommen dazu: “Tür frei.” – “Ist frei.”

Du trittst in den linken Bügel, nimmst die Zügel über dem Widerrist zusammen und steigst auf. Als du im Sattel sitzt, hört außerhalb des sandigen Vierecks alles auf zu existieren. Deine ganze Welt besteht nun einzig aus fünfzehn regelmäßig angeordneten Punkten.

Du nimmst auch den rechten Bügel auf. Dann setzt ihr euch in Bewegung, auf dem Hufschlag rechte Hand. Deine Beine und Arme finden ganz automatisch an die richtige Position, deine Muskeln spannen sich an, deine Handgelenke verlieren sich in ihrem Spiel. Und mit dem ersten Schritt wird klar: ihr beide seid jetzt eins.

Jede Bewegung ist die gleichzeitige harmonische Veränderung der Position zweier Individuen; jeder Schritt lässt euch beide voranschreiten, jede Hilfe verändert euren gemeinsamen Kurs, euer beider Geschwindigkeit.

Du wirst getragen, schwebst in Schritt, Trab und Galopp durch die Bahn. Ihr dreht eure Runden, Zirkel, Schlangenlinien, … ab und an dringt eine dumpfe Stimme aus der Mitte der Bahn mit Korrekturen oder Aufgaben an euch heran.

Am Ende seid ihr beide nass und entspannt. Im ruhigen Schritt geht ihr ganze Bahn. Bald wird es Zeit sich wieder zu trennen, Zeit zum Absteigen.

Ihr haltet. Du lobst deinen Träger, streichelst sein weiches Fell und zögerst. Schließlich schwingst du dich hinab. Deine Beine wieder auf dem Boden fühlst du dich unvollständig. Als auf dem Weg zum Stall die restliche Welt wieder auf dich eindringt, sehnst du dich bereits nach der nächste symbiotischen Reise in eine unbeschwerte Welt aus fünfzehn Punkten.

Master’s Open Day

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Cognitive Science is a unique combination and integration of various disciplines focusing around the question of how humans perceive and think. The University of Osnabrück, Germany offers international undergraduate, graduate and PhD programs in Cognitive Science predominantly taught in English.

  • What drives my attention?
  • How can I remember?
  • Why do I have emotions?
  • How do we learn?
  • What is the role of language?
  • How do we reason and solve problems?
  • How are cognitive abilities realised in biological and artificial systems?
  • Can neuroscience answer all these questions?
  • What do neurons tell us? How is the brain structured?
  • Why can a system be an autonomous agent?
  • What are the philosophical implications?
  • Is cognition extended or brainbound?
  • What is the role of external world?
  • How do humans and computers interface?
  • What is intelligence?
  • What does it need to design an agent?
  • How can complex information be processed effectively?

If you ever asked yourself one (or several) of the above questions you might be interested in studying Cognitive Science.

This year, in addition to our study taster for the Bachelor’s program, we are pleased to announce a Master’s Open Day on June, 12th. This day will give prospective Master’s students the opportunity to get to know Osnabrück’s program, research opportunities at the Institute of Cognitive Science and their potential fellow students, teachers and supervisors.

Sound interesting? — Then go ahead and try it!
Click here for further information and registration.

Schnupperstudium Cognitive Science

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Im vergangenen Sommer hat die Fachschaft des Studienganges Cognitive Science ein Schnupperstudium angeboten. Das Interesse groß und die Resonanz überwältigend. Daher werden wir im kommenden Semester noch einmal ein solches Programm anbieten.

Das Schnupperstudium richtet sich primär an Schulabgänger, die in diesem Herbst ihr Studium beginnen möchten. Es wird vom 14. bis 17. Jnui auf dem Hochschulgelände Westerberg stattfinden.

Neben Vorlesungsbesuchen — in den Fächern Cognitive Psychology, Philosophy of Mind, Action & Cognition, Introduction to Computational Lingustics und Introduction to Artifical Intelligence — stehen eine Einführung in den Aufbau des Studiums und die Präsentation aktueller Forschung des Institus für Kognitionswissenschaften auf dem Programm. Außerdem wird es die Möglichkeit geben, das Instituskolloquium zu besuchen und an Experimenten teilzunehmen.

Ziel unserer Veranstaltung ist es, den Studieninteressierten einen möglichst authentischen Einblick in das zu geben, was sie im Bachelor-Studiengang Cognitive Science erwarten wird. Uns ist wichitg, dass sie bei ihrer Studienwahl eine wohl informierte Entscheidung treffen, die auf mehr basiert als einem Wikipedia-Eintrag.

Weitere Informationen gibt’s hier.

Puzzled

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

Someone gave you a few hundred colorful pieces; each beatifully fascinating by itself, each completely unique. But they might reveal something larger, something much more meaningful, once you put them together.

You take the challenge. After a while, the outermost rows and columns are starting to build a frame. Some pieces seem to be missing, though. And you don’t yet know the dimensions you should be aiming for. You continue by sorting the pieces into bowls. Looking back at the frame, you decide to start with the lighter area in the lower left corner where the frame is already complete.

The lighter pieces move from their bowl onto the table. Face up they’re waiting for you to put them where they belong. Trying every possible position on every possible spot will be ineffective. You consider their shapes, examine them one by one. Suddenly your gaze meets it. Without even touching you know it’s the one that’s going to fit into the very corner. Your fingers move to pick it up, rotate it, put it into the spot you considered and carefully press it down — it fits perfectly.

Piece by piece you’re making progress, slowly recovering something the unconnected pieces couldn’t reveal before. Sometimes you’re discouraged, sometimes annoyed for not getting any further, not finding any matches between the spots available and the pieces considered.

However, searching through the contents of another bowl or unexpectedly finding an apparently novel piece on the floor, you suddenly encounter something fitting the gap you were complaining about.

Some day, no matter how long it takes, the picture will be complete. If only you keep on trying to solve the puzzle.