The multiple, interacting levels of cognitive systems (MILCS) perspective on group cognition. Goldstone, R. L. & Theiner, G. Philosophical Psychology, 30(3):338–372, 2017. Paper doi abstract bibtex We lay out a multiple, interacting levels of cognitive systems (MILCS) framework to account for the cognitive capacities of individuals and the groups to which they belong. The goal of MILCS is to explain the kinds of cognitive processes typically studied by cognitive scientists, such as perception, attention, memory, categorization, decision-making, problem solving, judgment, and flexible behavior. Two such systems are considered in some detail—lateral inhibition within a network for selecting the most attractive option from a candidate set and a diffusion process for accumulating evidence to reach a rapid and accurate decision. These system descriptions are aptly applied at multiple levels, including within and across people. These systems provide accounts that unify cognitive processes across multiple levels, can be expressed in a common vocabulary provided by network science, are inductively powerful yet appropriately constrained, and are applicable to a large number of superficially diverse cognitive systems. Given group identification processes, cognitively resourceful people will frequently form groups that effectively employ cognitive systems at higher levels than the individual. The impressive cognitive capacities of individual people do not eliminate the need to talk about group cognition. Instead, smart people can provide the interacting parts for smart groups
@article{Goldstone2017,
abstract = {We lay out a multiple, interacting levels of cognitive systems (MILCS) framework to account for the cognitive capacities of individuals and the groups to which they belong. The goal of MILCS is to explain the kinds of cognitive processes typically studied by cognitive scientists, such as perception, attention, memory, categorization, decision-making, problem solving, judgment, and flexible behavior. Two such systems are considered in some detail—lateral inhibition within a network for selecting the most attractive option from a candidate set and a diffusion process for accumulating evidence to reach a rapid and accurate decision. These system descriptions are aptly applied at multiple levels, including within and across people. These systems provide accounts that unify cognitive processes across multiple levels, can be expressed in a common vocabulary provided by network science, are inductively powerful yet appropriately constrained, and are applicable to a large number of superficially diverse cognitive systems. Given group identification processes, cognitively resourceful people will frequently form groups that effectively employ cognitive systems at higher levels than the individual. The impressive cognitive capacities of individual people do not eliminate the need to talk about group cognition. Instead, smart people can provide the interacting parts for smart groups},
author = {Goldstone, Robert L. and Theiner, Georg},
doi = {10.1080/09515089.2017.1295635},
file = {:Users/michaelk/Library/Application Support/Mendeley Desktop/Downloaded/Goldstone, Theiner - 2017 - The multiple, interacting levels of cognitive systems (MILCS) perspective on group cognition.pdf:pdf},
issn = {0951-5089},
journal = {Philosophical Psychology},
number = {3},
pages = {338--372},
title = {{The multiple, interacting levels of cognitive systems (MILCS) perspective on group cognition}},
url = {https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09515089.2017.1295635},
volume = {30},
year = {2017}
}
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