Realistic constraints on brain color perception and category learning
Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (4):495-496 (2005)
| Abstract | Steels & Belpaeme (S&B) ask how autonomous agents can derive perceptually grounded categories for successful communication, using color categorization as an example. Their comparison of nativism, empiricism, and culturalism, although interesting, does not include key biological and technological constraints for seeing color or learning color categories in realistic environments. Other neural models have successfully included these constraints. | |||||||||
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James Stanlaw (1997). Making Light of Keeping Color Categories in the Dark: Some Arguments Against Saunders and Van Brakel's Notions of Trivial Constraints in Color Nomenclature. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (2):208-209.
Luc Steels & Tony Belpaeme (2005). Coordinating Perceptually Grounded Categories Through Language: A Case Study for Colour. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (4):469-489.
E. N. Sokolov (2001). Sphericity in Cognition. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (4):703-704.
Kimberly A. Jameson (2005). Sharing Perceptually Grounded Categories in Uniform and Nonuniform Populations. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (4):501-502.
William S.-Y. Wang & Tao Gong (2005). Categorization in Artificial Agents: Guidance on Empirical Research? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (4):511-512.
Stephen Palmer (1999). Color, Consciousness, and the Isomorphism Constraint. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (6):923-943.
Laurence T. Maloney (2003). Surface Color Perception in Constrained Environments. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (1):38-39.
Joseph Levine (2006). Color and Color Experience: Colors as Ways of Appearing. Dialectica 60 (3):269-282.
Thomas Wachtler (2005). Interindividual Variation in Human Color Categories: Evidence Against Strong Influence of Language. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (4):510-510.
Mohan Matthen (2005). Is Color Perception Really Categorical? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (4):504-505.
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