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War and Science Artificial Intelligence • Is the intelligence of the computer the same as that of the human? • Initially, idea eagerly accepted • 1950 Turing test: can a subject interacting with a computer be persuaded that he/she is communicating instead with a human? Alan Turing (1912-1954) • Chinese Room Problem • Deep Blue vs. Kasparov Donald Hebb (1949) Canadian Neuropsychologist who mediated between the Gestalt and atomist-localizating points of view. The Organization of Behavior (1949) • Opposed to the behaviorist “Black Box” • It is impossible to describe behavior as interaction directly between sensory and motor processes • Impossible to describe behavior as an interaction between sensory and motor processors, thinking intervenes • Unlike M&P, Hebb proposed a Dynamic Network Properties of a Hebb Synapse Advances in Electronics • The Brain is an Electrical System – Neurons fire in an all-or-none fashion – Neurons may either increase or decrease another neuron’s chances of firing • Neuroscientists had equipment that could amplify and record neural signals Hodgkin and Huxley • Alan Lloyd Hodgkin and Andrew Huxley explain the mathematics and chemistry in the squid giant axon in 1952 • If one neuron can be explained with math, perhaps the same is true for the whole system (brain)? • This discovery corresponded with advances in computer technology Rosenblatt Perceptron (1958) • Learned to categorize – The perceptron had to be trained • If it was wrong, connections were adjusted The Founding of Cognitive Psychology • No single founder • George Miller: Seven +/- 2 • The computer and brain – Both electric – Process information in stages – Software can be modified (like synapses) Computers • Made it possible to tightly control stimulus presentation and measure reaction times • Offered a way to create and test theoretical models Darwin’s Theory • Variations in traits are the norm – They are inherited (through genes) – New variations appear spontaneously (genes mutate) • Changes in the environment will put selective pressures on these traits. Some will survive, some won’t Psychology already accepted it • Freud’s original theory of psychoanalysis proposed The instinctual System. 1. Life-Preservative Instincts (preserving the genes) • Biological needs • Fears (snakes, heights, dangerous humans). 2. Sexual Instincts (passing the genes on) Psychology already accepted it • • William James and the Psychology of Instincts They emerged in phases over a lifetime 1. Sucking, crying, sneezing 2. Biting, clasping, standing 3. Hunting, sex, parenting • They were inherited for the sake of survival Some Sociologists Did Not • Looking for Utopia – Margaret Mead in Samoa – Described a culture in which • Gender roles were reversed • No sexual jealousy • No rape, murder or war • Results were appealing to those who were concerned about trends in Western societies • Results were later challenged Common Misunderstandings about Evolution 1. Human behavior is genetically determined – Environment plays a large role 2. If it is evolutionary, we can’t change it – We have the power 3. Current mechanisms are optimally designed – – Environments change faster than genes. We are stone -age people in a modern world (McDonalds Effect) Every adaptation has a cost and perfecting one system will probably compromise another Limitations of Evolutionary Psychology • You can explain the physical properties of an animal with fossils, but behavior can only be inferred. • Physical properties often evolve to facilitate behavior, so we can take some guesses • Evolutionary psychology relies on genetics and the assumption that all current behaviors served a survival-based purpose in the past, if not currently. • So what do you do…? Observe, Hypothesize and Test • Phobias – Behaviorist approach (Everything is learned) • If you fear snakes, you must have been bitten – Evolutionary approach • Phobias represent an exaggeration of a useful survival tool • An inborn fear of snakes provides a survival advantage • Most phobias have a legitimate basis (spiders, snakes, heights, strangers, closed spaces, open spaces) • Phobias to modern threats (guns, electrical outlets) are rare Observe, Hypothesize and Test • Conditioned taste aversions – Behaviorist approach (Everything is learned) • We develop aversions when the US is closely paired with the CS • You can learn to hate a food even if you get sick hours after eating it – Evolutionary approach • Human diets were once based on foraging and new foods were encountered daily • A tasty treat might be poisonous, but you won’t get sick for a few hours • CTA is special learning system keeps you away from the stuff that might have made you sick Choosing a Mate • Observe behavior and look for an explanation – Men and women both get jealous, but men are much more likely to get violent about it – An evolutionary explanation: • Men face the problem of paternity uncertainty • It is important to defend the “genetic territory” • Men are, of course, generally more aggressive Choosing a Mate • Look to related species and compare/contrast – Chimpanzee females go into estrus when ovulating • Visible signs of sexual receptivity • Little interest in sex when there is little chance of conception – If we’re related, why don’t humans do this? – There is a selective advantage for males in knowing when a female is fertile Choosing a Mate • Studies show that, when ovulating, women – Dress more carefully • Haselton, 2006 – Have more interest in sex • Stanislaw and Rice, (1988) – Have more attractive faces (as judged by men) – Smell differently • Marlowe, 2004 – Favor “manly” faces Who’s Manlier? Who’s Ovulating? What about this? Evolutionary Psychology may be the Unifying Principle • It has tackled – Law – War – Religion – Economics – Advertising – Architecture – Cognition, Education, Sociology, etc.