Zenon Pylyshyn

E1031539

Zenon Pylyshyn was a cognitive scientist and philosopher known for his influential work on mental imagery, visual cognition, and the computational theory of mind.

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Zenon Pylyshyn canonical 1

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Predicate Object
instanceOf academic
cognitive scientist
person
philosopher
university professor
academicDegree PhD in experimental psychology
citizenship Canada
countryOfBirth Canada
countryOfDeath United States NERFINISHED
dateOfBirth 1937-12-20
dateOfDeath 2022-12-06
directed Rutgers Center for Cognitive Science NERFINISHED
educatedAt McGill University
employer Rutgers University NERFINISHED
University of Western Ontario NERFINISHED
familyName Pylyshyn NERFINISHED
fieldOfWork artificial intelligence
cognitive psychology
cognitive science
philosophy of mind
vision science
givenName Zenon NERFINISHED
influenced cognitive psychology of vision
computational models of cognition
philosophy of mind
knownFor FINST theory of visual indexing NERFINISHED
arguments for propositional representation of mental imagery
computational theory of mind
theory of cognitive architecture
work on mental imagery
work on multiple object tracking
work on visual cognition
mainInterest nature of mental representation
philosophy of cognitive science
relationship between vision and cognition
memberOf Cognitive Science Society NERFINISHED
name Zenon Walter Pylyshyn NERFINISHED
notableWork Computation and Cognition: Toward a Foundation for Cognitive Science NERFINISHED
Seeing and Visualizing: It’s Not What You Think NERFINISHED
The Robot’s Dilemma: The Frame Problem in Artificial Intelligence NERFINISHED
placeOfBirth Montreal NERFINISHED
placeOfDeath New Jersey NERFINISHED
positionHeld Board of Governors Professor at Rutgers University NERFINISHED
Canada Research Chair in Cognitive Science NERFINISHED
professor of computer science
professor of psychology
proposed FINST (Fingers of INSTantiation) visual indexing theory
receivedAward Donald O. Hebb Award of the Canadian Psychological Association NERFINISHED
Killam Research Fellowship NERFINISHED
researched attention and visual indexing
spatial cognition
theorized that mental imagery is represented propositionally rather than pictorially

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Jerry Fodor influenced Zenon Pylyshyn