Behavioural evidence inconclusive
The behavioural evidence can't determine whether pictorial or propositional representations offer an adequate explanation of mental imagery. Instead, the evidence supports a theory about the process via which representations are employed.
John Anderson, 1978.

Note: Anderson supports ths argument with a formal proof.
Immediately related elementsHow this works
-
Artificial Intelligence »Artificial Intelligence
Can computers think? [1] »Can computers think? [1]
No: computers can't understand images [5b] »No: computers can't understand images [5b]
Images represented by filled cells in an array »Images represented by filled cells in an array
Images are Quasi-pictorial representations »Images are Quasi-pictorial representations
Image Psychology »Image Psychology
Experimental evidence »Experimental evidence
Behavioural evidence »Behavioural evidence
Behavioural evidence inconclusive
Argument undermined by neuroimaging evidence »Argument undermined by neuroimaging evidence
Behavioural evidence favours image psychology »Behavioural evidence favours image psychology
+Komentarai (0)
+Citavimą (0)
+About