Inquiry into intentional systems I: Issues in ecological physics Peter N. KuglerRobert E. ShawJeffrey Kinsella-Shaw OriginalPaper Pages: 98 - 121
Implicit and explicit memory: Implications for the symbol-manipulation versus connectionism controversy G. WoltersR. H. Phaf OriginalPaper Pages: 137 - 144
Perceptual-learning systems as conservative structures: Is economy an attractor? Cees van Leeuwen OriginalPaper Pages: 145 - 152
Are multilayer feedforward networks effectively Turing Machines? Wilemm J. M. Levelt OriginalPaper Pages: 153 - 157
Alice in Wonderland, or psychology among the information sciences D. J. K. Mewhort OriginalPaper Pages: 158 - 162
Treating connectionism properly: Reflections on Smolensky Jay F. Rosenberg OriginalPaper Pages: 163 - 174
“Smart” mechanisms emerging from cooperation and competition between modules Johan Wagemans OriginalPaper Pages: 181 - 196
The information-processing approach A. H. C. van der HeijdenSarah Stebbins OriginalPaper Pages: 197 - 206
Direct parameter specification and the concept of perception Odmar Neumann OriginalPaper Pages: 207 - 215
Stratification in perception and action H. Looren de JongA. F. Sanders OriginalPaper Pages: 216 - 228
Representational content and computation in the human visual system Martin Eimer OriginalPaper Pages: 238 - 242
Gibsonian representations and connectionist symbol processing: Prospects for unification Gary Hatfield OriginalPaper Pages: 243 - 252
Connectionist representation, semantic compositionality, and the instability of concept structure Thomas GoschkeDirk Koppelberg OriginalPaper Pages: 253 - 270