Jeff Lidz sent me this
great little piece by Randy Gallistel on his favorite theme: how most
neuroscientists have misunderstood how brains compute. I’ve discussed Randy’s
stuff in various FoL posts (here,
here,
and here).
Here in just four lucid pages, Randy makes his main point again. If he is right
(and the form of his argument seems impeccable to me), then much of what goes
on in neuroscience is just plain wrong. Indeed, if Randy is right, then current
neo-connectionist/neural net assumptions about the brain are about as accurate
as 1950s-60s behaviorist conceptions were about the mind. In other words, at
best of tertiary interest and, more likely, deserving to be completely
forgotten.[1]
At any rate, Randy here makes four main points.
First, that there is recent evidence (discussed here)
strongly pointing to the conclusion that information can be stored inside a
single neuron (rather than in connections of many neurons).
Second, that there is scads of behavioral evidence showing
that brains store number values and that there is no way of storing numbers
this in connection weights, thus implying that any theory of the brain that
limits itself to this kind of hardware must
be at best incomplete and at worst wrong.
Third, that there is a close connection between neural net
“plasticity” conceptions of the brain and traditional empiricist conceptions of
the mind (especially learning). In fact, Randy argues that these are largely
flip sides of the same coin.
Fourth, that brains already contain all the hardware that is
required to function like classical computers, the latter being the perfect
complements for the computational cognitive theories that replaced behaviorism.
And all in four pages.
There is one argument that Randy hints at but doesn’t stress
that I would like to add to his four. It is a conceptual argument. Here it is.
Whatever one thinks of cognition, it is clear that animals
use large molecules like DNA and RNA for information processing. Indeed, this
is now standard biological dogma. As Gallistel and King (here)
illustrates, this system has all the capacities of a classical computer
(addresses, read-write memory, variables, binding etc.). So here’s the
conceptual argument: imagine that you had an animal with the wherewithal to
classically compute hereditary information but instead of repurposing
(exapting) this system for cognitive ends it developed an entirely different additional system for this purpose. In other
words, it had all it needed sitting there but ignored these resources and
embodied cognition in a completely different way. Does this seem plausible? Is
this the way evolution typically works? Isn’t opportunism the main mover in the
evolution game? And if it is, doesn’t this suggest that Randy’s conjecture must be right? In fact, wouldn’t it be
weird if large chunks of cognition did not exploit that computational machinery
already sitting there in DNA/RNA and other large molecules? In fact, wouldn’t
the contrary assumption bear a huge burden of proof? Well, you know what I
think!
Why is this not the common perception? Why is Randy’s
position considered exotic? Here’s the one word answer: Empiricism! In the
cog-neuro world this is the default view. There is little to empirically
support this conception (see here
for a review of the pas de deux between unsupported empiricism in psychology
and tendentious reasoning in neural net neuroscience). Indeed, it largely
flourishes when we know next to nothing about some domain of inquiry. However,
it is the default conception of the mind. What Randy is pointing out (and has
repeatedly pointed out and is right to point out) is that it is fatally flawed,
not only as a theory of mind but also as a theory of the brain. And its flaws
are conceptual as well as empirical. I can’t wait for the day that this becomes
the conventional wisdom, though given the methodological dualism characteristic
of the cog-neuro-sciences, I suspect that this day is not just around the
corner. Too bad.
[1]
Note that I say “deserving” of amnesia. This concedes the sad fact that
neo-behaviorism is making a vigorous comeback within cognition. Yet another
indication of the collapse of civilization.
Gallistel's article, of course, is concise but nevertheless compelling and to-the-point (as always). Intriguingly enough, there actually isn't just the results from Lund mentioned in the article supporting such a (i.e. Gallistel & King's) point of view. David Glanzman's group at UCLA has produced results with similar implications working with Aplysia: doi: 10.7554/eLife.03896
ReplyDeleteAnd, though this could be considered a shameless act of self-promotion (well, it actually kind of is), I'm also adding this because it's on topic: For those interested, I've written a brief commentary as to why these results are important for cognitive science a few months back (mostly echoing Gallistel's main points and partly Norbert's discussion above): doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01112
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