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Courses (at Johns Hopkins)
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Research
Primary Area: Universal grammar -- Optimality Theory:
phonology, syntax, acquisition, learnability, processing.
Secondary Areas: Integration of connectionist ('neural') and symbolic
computation: computational, linguistic, and philosophical issues.
Precise theories of higher cognitive domains like language and reasoning
rely crucially on complex symbolic rule systems like those of grammar and
logic. According to traditional cognitive science and artificial
intelligence, such symbolic systems are the very essence of higher
intelligence. Yet intelligence resides in the brain, where computation
appears to be numerical, not symbolic; parallel, not serial; quite
distributed, not as highly localized as in symbolic systems. Furthermore,
when observed carefully, much of human behavior is remarkably sensitive to
the detailed statistical properties of experience; hard-edged rule systems
seem ill-equipped to handle these subtleties. My research attempts to
identify the proper roles within a unified theory of cognition for symbolic
computation, numerical neural computation, and statistical computation.
More specifically, the basic questions driving this research include: What
are the central general principles of computation in connectionist --
abstract neural -- networks? How can these principles be reconciled with
those of symbolic computation? Addressing these questions over the past two
decades, my work has led to a new computational architecture for cognition
which integrates connectionist and symbolic computation. Can this framework
further the theory of higher cognition, by connecting it with lower-level
principles derived from neural computation?
The connectionist conception of intuitive knowledge as a collection of
conflicting soft constraints, interacting via optimization of well-formedness
or Harmony, led in joint research with Géraldine Legendre to
the connectionist-based formalism of Harmonic Grammar.Incorporating the richly tructured representations and universal well-formedness
constraints of symbolic linguistic theory, Alan
Prince and I developed a grammar formalism called Optimality Theory
which brings general connectionist computational principles of optimization
into the heart of the symbolic theory of universal grammar. The optimization
that emerges is no longer inherently numerical: constraint strengths are
encoded in a hierarchy of constraints, ranked from strongest to weakest; each
constraint is stronger than all weaker constraints combined.
According to Optimality Theory (OT), possible human languages share a
common set of universal constraints on well-formedness. These constraints are
highly general, and hence conflict; thus some must be violated in optimal,
i.e., grammatical, structures. The different surface patterns of the world's
languages emerge via different priority rankings of the fixed set of
universal constraints: each ranking is a language-particular grammar, a means
of resolving the inherent conflicts among the universal constraints.
My current research addresses multiple aspects of OT. These include superadditive constraint interaction ('local conjunction'
of constraints), especially in phonology (vowel harmony; Obligatory Contour
Principle; sonority and syllable structure), as well as numerical and
connectionist implementation of OT constraint interaction.
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Ph.D.
Students (since 1995)
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Current position
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Ph.D. Dissertation, Cognitive Science, Johns Hopkins or Research
Topic
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Sara
Finley
Rebecca Morley
Adam
Wayment`
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Ph.D. students, Cognitive Science, JHU
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1st year
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Adam Buchwald
Oren Schwartz
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Ph.D. students, Cognitive Science, JHU
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Recoverability Optimality Theory: Discourse anaphora in
a bidirectional framework.
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Lisa Davidson
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Assistant Professor of Linguistics, NYU
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The interaction of articulatory, perceptual, and
temporal elements in consonant cluster production. 2003.
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John Hale
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Assistant Professor
of Linguistics, Michigan State University
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Grammar,
uncertainty, and sentence processing. 2003.
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Matt Goldrick
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Postdoctoral Research Associate, Cognitive and
Linguistic Sciences, Brown
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Patterns in sound, patterns in mind: Phonological
regularities in speech production. 2002.
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Colin Wilson
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Assistant Professor of Linguistics, UCLA
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Targeted Constraints: An Approach to Positional
Neutralization in Optimality Theory. 2000.
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Adamantios Gafos
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Assistant Professor of Linguistics, NYU
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The Articulatory Basis of Locality in Phonology.
1996.
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Bruce Tesar
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Assistant Professor of Linguistics, Rutgers
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Computational Optimality Theory. 1995. Computer
Science, U. of Colorado
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Education
- Ph.D. in mathematical
physics, Indiana University, 1981.
- M.S. in physics, Indiana
University, 1977.
- A.B. summa cum laude in physics,
Harvard University, 1976.
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Positions
- Full Professor,
Department of Cognitive Science, Johns Hopkins University, 1994-present.
- Chair, Department of
Cognitive Science, Johns Hopkins University, Jan. 1997 - June 1998
(Acting), July 1998 - June 2000.
- Adjunct Professor,
Department of Linguistics, University of Maryland at College Park,
1994-present.
- Assistant Director,
Center for Language and Speech Processing, Johns Hopkins University,
1995-present.
- Director, NSF IGERT
Training Program in the Cognitive Science of Language, 1999-2004.
- Professor, Department of Computer Science,
University of Colorado at Boulder
Full Professor,
1994-95 (on leave, 1994-95).
Associate
Professor, 1990-94.
Assistant Professor, 1985-90.
- Assistant Research
Cognitive Scientist (Assistant Professor - Research), Institute for
Cognitive Science, University of California at San Diego, 1982-85.
- Visiting Scholar,
Program in Cognitive Science, University of California at San Diego,
1981-82.
- Faculty, First
International Summer Institute in Cognitive Science, SUNY Buffalo, 1994.
- Faculty, Linguistic
Institute, University of California at Santa Cruz, 1991.
- Faculty, Connectionist
Models Summer School; Carnegie-Mellon University, 1986, 1988; University
of California, San Diego, 1990; University of Colorado, Boulder, 1993.
- National Science
Foundation, John H. Edwards, and Indiana University Graduate Fellow,
1976-81.
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Recent
Presentations
o
OT & Markedess Theory (8 slides).ppt
[76K]
o
BrbrNet
(12 slides).ppt (Local connectionist implementation
of a Harmonic Grammar for syllabification in Berber) [3.5M]
o
Lango ATR Harmony (17
slides).ppt [.6M]
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SHarC
Theorem (5 slides).ppt [92K]
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Infant NPA
Experiments (8 + 4 slides).ppt [151K]
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The Priority of
Markedness (32 slides).ppt [244K]
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ICS Architecture (25 slides).ppt [2.7M]
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HG
Parser (10 slides).ppt [2M]
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CVNet (18
slides).ppt [182K]
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Harmonic
Mind Wrappers.ppt [41K]
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CVNet (1 slide).ppt [57K]
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Learnability in OT (3 slides).ppt [54K]
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Intro
to OT (6 slides).ppt [127K]
- An Integrated
Connectionist/Symbolic (ICS) Cognitive Architecture. Seoul National
University. November, 2002. [4.4M ppt file]
- Jakobson's Grand
Unified Theory of Linguistic Cognition. Seoul National University.
November, 2002. [.5M ppt file]
- Constraint Conjunction
and Strong Harmonic Completeness. Korean Phonological Society. November,
2002.[0.6M ppt file]
- The Harmonic Mind.
Cognition Workshop. North American Summer School for Logic, Language,
and Information. Stanford University. July, 2002. [2.4M ppt file]
- Markedness Optimization
in Grammar and Cognition. Plenary Lecture, Annual Meeting of the
Linguistic Society of America. San Francisco. January, 2002. [1M ppt
file]
- Formal Typology:
Explanation in Optimality Theory. Phonology Forum. Tokyo, Japan. August,
2001. [0.5M ppt file]
- The Harmonic Mind.
International Cognitive Science Conference. Beijing, China. August,
2001.[2M ppt file]
- The Harmonic Mind.
Presidential Address, Annual Meeting of the Society for Philosophy and
Psychology. Cincinnati, OH. June, 2001. [4M ppt file]
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Publications
For a complete
list, see the Complete Vita 
ROA = http://ruccs.rutgers.edu/roa.html,
the Rutgers Optimality Archive
 
Books
- Smolensky,
Paul & Legendre, Géraldine. 2005. The Harmonic Mind: From Neural
Computation To Optimality-Theoretic Grammar Vol. 1: Cognitive Architecture; vol. 2: Linguistic and
Philosophical Implications. MIT Press.
- Prince, Alan &
Smolensky, Paul. 2004. Optimality
Theory: Constraint interaction in generative grammar. Blackwell. as Technical
Report CU-CS-696-93, Department of Computer Science, University of
Colorado at Boulder, and Technical Report TR-2, Rutgers Center for
Cognitive Science, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, April 1993. Rutgers Optimality Archive 537 version,
2002.
- Tesar, Bruce & Smolensky,
Paul. 2000. Learnability
in Optimality Theory. MIT Press.
- Smolensky, Paul, Mozer, Michael C.,
& Rumelhart, David E. (eds.). 1996. Mathematical perspectives on
neural networks. Erlbaum.
- Macdonald,
Cynthia & Macdonald, Graham. (eds.). 1995. Connectionism: Debates on
psychological explanation, Volume 2. Basil Blackwell. [4 chapters, 183 pp.]
- Mozer, Michael C.,
Smolensky, Paul, Touretzky, David, Elman, Jeffrey, & Weigend, Andreas. (eds.). 1993. Proceedings
of the Connectionist Models Summer School 1993.Lawrence
Erlbaum Publishers.
- Smolensky, Paul. 1992. Il
Connessionismo: Tra simboli e neuroni. Italian translation
of the entire treatment, including peer commentary: On the proper
treatment of connectionism, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 11,
1-74; with introduction by Marcello Frixione. Genova: Marietti/Cambridge University Press.
Papers
Grammar (ROA = Rutgers
Optimality Archive = http://roa.rutgers.edu)
- Hale, John & Smolensky,
Paul. 2005. Harmonic Grammars and harmonic parsers for formal
languages. In [1]. Chapter 10.
- Legendre, Géraldine,
Smolensky, Paul, and Miyata, Yoshiro. 2005. Harmonic Grammar and its
subsymbolic foundations. In [1]. Chapter 11.
- Smolensky, Paul &
Tesar, Bruce. 2005. Principles of Optimality Theory. In [1]. Chapter 12.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2005.
Optimality in phonology II: Markedness, feature domains, and Local
Constraint Conjunction. In [1]. Chapter 14.
- Smolensky, Paul &
Stevenson, Suzanne. 2005. Optimality in sentence processing. In [1]. Chapter 19.
- Legendre, Géraldine, Sorace, Antonella
& Smolensky, Paul. 2005. The Optimality Theory -- Harmonic
Grammar connection. In [1]. Chapter 20.
- Davidson, Lisa, Smolensky,
Paul, and Jusczyk, Peter W. 2004. The initial and final states:
Theoretical implications and experimental explorations of richness of
the base. In René Kager, Joe Pater and Wim Zonneveld, eds. Constraints
in Phonological Acquisition. Cambridge University Press. Reprinted
in [1], Chapter 17. ROA
428.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2003. Markedness, Harmony, and
phonological invisibility. Journal of Cognitive Science. 4:1-41.
- Prince, Alan, and
Smolensky, Paul. 2003. Optimality Theory in phonology. In International
Encyclopedia of Linguistics, ed. William John Frawley. Oxford,
England: Oxford University Press.
- Buchwald, Adam,
Schwartz, Oren, Seidl, Amanda, & Smolensky, Paul. 2002. Recoverability Optimality Theory:
Discourse Anaphora in a Bi-directional framework. Proceedings of
the EDILOG Conference, Edinburgh. 8 pages.
- Moreton, Elliott, and
Smolensky, Paul. 2002. Typological consequences of Local Constraint
Conjunction. Proceedings of the 21st West Coast Conference on Formal
Linguistics.
- Jusczyk, Peter W.,
Smolensky, Paul, and Allocco, Theresa. 2002. How English-learning infants respond to markedness and
faithfulness constraints. Language Acquisition 10: 31-73.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2002.
Optimality Theory: Frequently
Asked ‘Questions’. Phonological
Studies.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2002.
Why OT now? Phonological
Studies.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2001. Optimality Theory. In MIT
Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences, eds. Robert A. Wilson and
Frank C. Keil. Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press/Bradford Books.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2001.
Optimality Theory: Frequently
Asked ‘Questions’. In Japanese translation: Gengo,
September, Tokyo: Taishukan; Haruka Fukazawa and Mafuyu Kitahara, translators.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2001.
Why OT now? In Japanese
translation: Gengo, September, Tokyo: Taishukan; Haruka
Fukazawa and Mafuyu Kitahara, translators.
- Soderstrom, Melanie, Mathis,
Donald W., and Smolensky, Paul. 2001. Toward computational empirical testing of linguistic innateness:
Abstract genomic encoding of an Optimality-Theoretic grammar. Proceedings
of the Third International Conference on Cognitive Science,
Beijing, China, 14-25. University of Science and Technology of China
Press.
- Hale, John and
Smolensky, Paul. 2001. A
parser for harmonic context-free grammars.
Proceedings of the 23rd Annual
Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. Johanna D. Moore and
Keith Stenning, editors. pages 427-432.
- Smolensky, P. 2000.
Grammar-based connectionist approaches to language.
Cognitive Science 23: 589-613. Reprinted in M. Christiansen and
N. Chater. 2000. Connectionist Psycholinguistics. Ablex.
- Tesar, B. &
Smolensky, P. 1998. Learning Optimality-Theoretic grammars.
Lingua, 106: 161-196. Reprinted in Sorace, A., Heycock, C. and Shillcock,
R. (eds.) Language Acquisition: Knowledge Representation and Processing.
Elsevier.
- Legendre, G.,
Smolensky, P., & Wilson, C. 1998. When
is less more? Faithfulness and minimal links in wh-chains.
In Pilar Barbosa,
Danny Fox, Paul Hagstrom, Martha McGinnis, and David Pesetsky, eds., Is
the Best Good Enough? Optimality and Competition in Syntax. MIT
Press. 249-289
- Tesar, B. &
Smolensky, P. 1998. Learnability in Optimality Theory. Linguistic
Inquiry, 29: 229-268
- Prince, A. &
Smolensky, P. 1997. Optimality: From neural networks to universal grammar.
Science 275: 1604-1610.
- Smolensky, P. 1996. On
the comprehension/production dilemma in child language. Linguistic
Inquiry 27: 720-731. ROA-118.
- Smolensky, P. 1996. The
initial state and 'richness of the base' in Optimality Theory.
Accepted for publication in Linguistic Inquiry in 1997. Technical
Report JHU-CogSci-96-4, Cognitive Science Department, Johns Hopkins
University. ROA-154.
- Legendre, G., Wilson,
C., Smolensky, P., Homer, K., & Raymond, W. 1995. Optimality in wh-chains. University
of Massachusetts Occasional Papers in Linguistics 18: Papers in
Optimality Theory, J. Beckman, S. Urbanczyk,
& L. Walsh, eds. Amherst, MA: GLSA, University of Massachusetts.
607-636. ROA-85.
- Smolensky, P. 1995. On
the structure of Con, the constraint component of UG. Handout of
talk at UCLA, April 7. ROA-86
- Tesar, B. &
Smolensky, P. 1994. The learnability of Optimality Theory.
Proceedings of the West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics XIII.
122-137.
- Smolensky,
P. 1993. Harmony, markedness, and phonological activity. Handout of
keynote address, Rutgers Optimality Workshop—1, October 23.
ROA-87.
- Legendre, G., Raymond,
W., & Smolensky, P. 1993. An
Optimality-Theoretic typology of case and grammatical voice systems.
Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley
Linguistics Society. Berkeley, CA. February. 464-478. ROA-3.
- Legendre, G., Miyata, Y., & Smolensky,
P. 1991. Unifying syntactic and semantic approaches to
unaccusativity: A connectionist approach. In L. Sutton & C.
Johnson (with Ruth Shields) (Eds.), Proceedings of the Seventeenth
Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society. Berkeley, CA. February.
156-167.
- Prince, A. &
Smolensky, P. 1991. Notes on Connectionism and Harmony Theory in
Linguistics. Technical Report CU-CS-533-91, Department of Computer
Science, University of Colorado at Boulder. July. [Notes from the
course, 'Connectionism and Harmony Theory in Linguistics,' LSA
Linguistic Institute, University of California, Santa Cruz; July, 1991.]
- Smolensky, P. 1991. Connectionism.
In W. Bright (Ed.) The International Encyclopedia of Linguistics.
Oxford University Press. 294-297.
- Legendre, G., Miyata, Y., & Smolensky,
P. 1990. Can connectionism contribute to syntax? Harmonic
Grammar, with an application. Proceedings of the 26th Meeting of
the Chicago Linguistic Society. Chicago, IL. April.
- Legendre, G., Miyata, Y., & Smolensky,
P. 1990. Harmonic Grammar -- A formal multi-level
connectionist theory of linguistic well-formedness: An application. Proceedings
of the Twelfth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society,
Cambridge, MA. July. 884-891.
- Legendre, G., Miyata, Y., & Smolensky,
P. 1990. Harmonic Grammar -- A formal multi-level
connectionist theory of linguistic well-formedness: Theoretical
foundations. Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Conference of the
Cognitive Science Society, Cambridge, MA. July. 388-395.
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Computation
- Smolensky, Paul &
Tesar, Bruce. 2005. Symbolic
computation with activation patterns. In [1]. Chapter 7. 225-259.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2005.
Tensor product representations:
Formal foundations. In [1]. Chapter 8. 259-334.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2005.
Constraints and optimization:
Harmony maximization. In [1]. Chapter 9. 335-382.
- Smolensky, P. 2003. Connectionism. In International
Encyclopedia of Linguistics, ed. William John Frawley. Oxford,
England: Oxford University Press.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2001. Connectionist approaches to
language. In MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences, eds.
Robert A. Wilson and Frank C. Keil. Cambridge,
MA: MIT Press/Bradford Books.
- Smolensky, P. (1996). Computational,
dynamical, and statistical perspectives on the processing and learning
problems in neural network theory. In [4]. 1-15.
- Smolensky, P. (1996). Computational
perspectives on neural networks. In [4]. 17-40.
- Smolensky, P. (1996). Dynamical
perspectives on neural networks. In [4]. 245-270.
- Smolensky, P. (1996). Statistical
perspectives on neural networks. In [4]. 453-496.
- Tesar, B. &
Smolensky, P. (1994). Synchronous-firing variable binding is spatio-temporal tensor product representation. Proceedings
of the 16th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society.
Atlanta, GA. August.
- Smolensky, P. (1993).
Harmonic Grammars for formal languages. In S. Hanson, J. D. Cowan,
& C. L. Giles, (Eds.), Advances in Neural Information Processing
Systems 5, San Mateo, CA: Morgan Kaufmann. [Collected papers of the
IEEE Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems-Natural and
Synthetic, Denver, Nov. 1992.] 847-854.
- Miyata, Y, Smolensky, P., & Legendre, G.
(1993). Distributed representation and parallel processing of
recursive structures. Proceedings of the 15th Annual Conference
of the Cognitive Science Society, Boulder, CO. June. 759-764.
- Wagner, K., Mozer, M.,
Smolensky, P., Miyata, Y., Fellows, M. (1993). Optical neural networks using a new radial nonlinear neural
layer. Proceedings of the SPIE (Society of Photo-Optical
Instrumentation Engineers), 1773A-10.
- McMillan, C., Mozer,
M., & Smolensky, P. (1993). Dynamic
conflict resolution in a connectionist rule‑based system. Proceedings
of the 13th International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence,
1366–1371. San Mateo, CA: Morgan Kauffmann.
- McMillan, C., Mozer,
M., & Smolensky, P. (1992). Rule
induction through integrated symbolic and subsymbolic processing. In
J. Moody, S. Hanson, & R. Lippman, (Eds.),
Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 4. San Mateo,
CA: Morgan Kaufmann. [Collected papers of the IEEE Conference on Neural
Information Processing Systems—Natural and Synthetic, Denver, Nov.
1991.] 969–976.
- Smolensky, P. (1992). Integrated connectionist/symbolic
computation and formal languages. Proceedings of the
International Symposia on Information Sciences. Iizuka,
Kyushu, Japan. July. 42–49.
- Smolensky, P. 1991. Connectionism. In W. Bright
(Ed.) The International Encyclopedia of Linguistics. Oxford
University Press. 294–297.
- Legendre, G., Miyata, Y., & Smolensky,
P. (1991). Distributed recursive structure processing.
In Touretzky, D. S., Lippman, R. (Eds.), Advances
in Neural Information Processing Systems 3. San Mateo, CA: Morgan
Kaufmann. [Collected papers of the IEEE Conference on Neural Information
Processing Systems-Natural and Synthetic, Denver, Nov. 1990.] 591-597.
- McMillan, C., Mozer,
M. C., & Smolensky, P. (1991). The
connectionist scientist game: Rule extraction and refinement in a neural
network. Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Conference of the
Cognitive Science Society, Chicago, IL. July.
- McMillan, C., Mozer,
M., & Smolensky, P. (1991). Learning
explicit rules in a neural network. Proceedings of the
International Joint Conference on Neural Networks. Seattle, WA.
July.
- Smolensky, P. (1990). Tensor
product variable binding and the representation of symbolic structures
in connectionist networks. Artificial Intelligence, 46,
159-216. [Reprinted in G. Hinton, (Ed.), (1990), Connectionist symbol
processing, Elsevier/MIT Press.]
- Brousse,
O. & Smolensky, P. (1990). Connectionist generalization and
incremental learning in combinatorial domains. In H. Haken (Ed.), Synergetics
of Cognition. Springer-Verlag. 70-80.
- Smolensky, P. (1990). Representation
in connectionist networks. Intellectica:
The Journal of the French Association for Cognitive Research, 9-10,
127-165.
- Brousse,
O. & Smolensky, P. (1990). Interference
and generalization in connectionist networks: Within-domain structure or
between-domain correlation? — A response, Neural Network
Review, 4, 29.
- Mozer, M. C., & Smolensky, P. (1989). Using
relevance to reduce network size automatically. Connection
Science, 1, 3-16.
- Dolan, C. &
Smolensky, P. (1989). Tensor Product Production System: A modular
architecture and representation. Connection Science, 1,
53-68.
- Mozer, M. C., &
Smolensky, P. (1989). Skeletonization:
Trimming the fat from a network via relevance assessment. In D. S.
Touretzky (Ed.), Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 1.
San Mateo, CA: Morgan Kaufmann. [Collected papers of the IEEE Conference
on Neural Information Processing Systems—Natural and Synthetic,
Denver, Nov. 1988.] 107–115.
- Brousse,
O. & Smolensky, P. (1989). Virtual memories and massive
generalization in connectionist combinatorial learning. Proceedings
of the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society. Ann
Arbor, MI. August. 380-387.
- Smolensky, P. (1988). Analysis
of distributed representation of constituent structure in connectionist
systems. Proceedings of Neural Information Processing Systems-87.
Denver, CO. November. 730-739.
- Bein,
J. & Smolensky, P. (1988). Application
of the interactive activation model to document retrieval. Proceedings
of Neuro‑Nîmes 1988: Neural networks and
their applications. Nîmes, France.
November. 295–308.
- McMillan, C. &
Smolensky, P. (1988). Analyzing a connectionist model as a system of
soft rules. Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Meeting of the
Cognitive Science Society. Montreal, Canada. August. 62-68.
- Dolan, C. &
Smolensky, P. (1988). Implementing
a connectionist production system using tensor products. In D.
Touretzky, G. E. Hinton, & T. J. Sejnowski (Eds.), Proceedings of
the Connectionist Models Summer School, 1988. Morgan Kaufmann.
265–272.
- Smolensky, P. (1987).
On variable binding and the representation of symbolic structures in
connectionist systems. Technical Report CU-CS-355-87, Department of
Computer Science, University of Colorado at Boulder. February.
- Smolensky, P. (1986). Formal modeling of subsymbolic
processes: An introduction to harmony theory. In N. E. Sharkey
(Ed.), Directions in the Science of Cognition. London: Horwoods. 204–235.
- Smolensky, P. (1986). Information
processing in dynamical systems: Foundations of harmony theory. In
D. E. Rumelhart, J. L. McClelland, & the PDP Research Group, Parallel
Distributed Processing: Explorations in the Microstructure of Cognition.
Volume 1: Foundations. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press/Bradford Books.
194-281.
- Smolensky, P. (1986). Neural
and conceptual interpretations of parallel distributed processing
models. In J. L. McClelland, D. E. Rumelhart, & the PDP Research
Group, Parallel Distributed Processing: Explorations in the
Microstructure of Cognition. Volume 2: Psychological and Biological
Models. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press/Bradford Books. 390-431.
- Rumelhart, D. E.,
Smolensky, P., McClelland, J. L., & Hinton, G. E. (1986). Schemata
and sequential thought processes in parallel distributed processing. J.
L. McClelland, D. E. Rumelhart, & the PDP Research Group, Parallel
Distributed Processing: Explorations in the Microstructure of Cognition.
Volume 2: Psychological and Biological Models. Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press/Bradford Books. 7-57. [Reprinted in A. Collins & E. Smith (Eds), 1988, Readings in Cognitive Science, San
Mateo, CA: Morgan Kaufmann.]
- Smolensky, P. (1984). The
mathematical role of self-consistency in parallel computation. Proceedings
of the Sixth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society.
Boulder, CO. June. 319-325.
- Riley, M. S. &
Smolensky, P. (1984). A parallel model of (sequential) problem
solving. Proceedings of the Sixth Annual Conference of the
Cognitive Science Society. Boulder, CO. June. 286-292.
- Smolensky, P. (1984). Harmony theory: thermal parallel
models in a computational context. In P. Smolensky & M. S.
Riley, Harmony theory: Problem solving, parallel cognitive models, and thermal
physics, Technical Report 8404. Institute for Cognitive Science,
University of California at San Diego. April.
- Hinton, G. E. &
Smolensky, P. (1984). Parallel
computation and the mass‑spring model of motor control. Report
123. Center for Human Information Processing, University of California
at San Diego. June.
- Smolensky, P. (1983).
Schema selection and stochastic inference in modular environments. Proceedings
of the National Conference on Artificial Intelligence. Washington,
DC. August. 378-382.
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Foundations
- Smolensky, Paul &
Legendre, Géraldine. 2005. The
unity of cognitive science: Methodological considerations. In [1]. Chapter 3. 93-113.
- Smolensky, Paul. 2005.
Computational levels and
integrated connectionist/symbolic explanation. In [1]. Chapter 23. 1035-1125.
- Smolensky, P. (1995). Constituent
structure and explanation in an integrated connectionist/symbolic
cognitive architecture. In [5]. 221-290.
- Smolensky, P. (1995). On the projectable
predicates of connectionist psychology: A case for belief. In C.
Macdonald & G. Macdonald (Eds.). Connectionism: Debates on
Psychological Explanation, Volume Two. 357-394. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
- Smolensky, P. (1994). Computational
theories of mind. In S. Guttenplan (Ed.), A
Companion to the Philosophy of Mind. Blackwell Publishers. 176-185.
- Smolensky, P. (1991). Connectionism,
constituency, and the language of thought. In B. Loewer
& G. Rey (Eds.), Meaning in Mind: Fodor
and his Critics. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. 201-227. Reprinted in [5].
- Smolensky, P. (1990). Connectionism and the foundations of
AI. In D. Partridge & Y. Wilks (Eds.),
The Foundations of Artificial Intelligence: A Sourcebook.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 306–326.
- Smolensky, P. (1989). Connectionism and constituent
structure. In R. Pfeifer, Z. Schreter, F.
Fogelman, & L. Steels (Eds.), Connectionism in Perspective.
Amsterdam: Elsevier. 3–24.
- Smolensky, P. (1989). Connectionist
modeling: Neural computation/mental connections. In L. Nadel (Ed.),
P. Culicover, L. A. Cooper, R. M. Harnish (Assoc. Eds.), Neural connections, mental
computation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press/Bradford. 49-67. [Reprinted in
J. Haugeland, (Ed.). (1997). Mind Design II: Philosophy, Psychology,
Artificial Intelligence, MIT Press/Bradford Books.]
- Smolensky, P. (1987). On the connectionist reduction of
conscious rule interpretation. Proceedings of the Ninth
Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. Seattle, WA. July.
187–94.
- Smolensky, P. (1987). The
constituent structure of connectionist mental states: A reply to Fodor
and Pylyshyn. Southern Journal of Philosophy, 26
(Supplement), 137-63. [Reprinted in T. Horgan & J. Tienson (Eds.),
(1991), Connectionism and the Philosophy of Mind, Dordrecht: Kluwer
Academic. 281-308; Spanish
translation in E. Rabossi (Ed.), Filosofía
y Ciencia Cognitiva, Buenos Aires-Barcelona: Editorial Paidós.]
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Integration
98.
Smolensky, Paul & Legendre, Géraldine. 2005.
Harmony optimization and the
computational architecture of the mind/brain. In [1]. Chapter 1. 3-56.
99.
Smolensky, Paul & Legendre, Géraldine. 2005.
Principles of the Integrated
Connectionist/Symbolic cognitive architecture. In [1]. Chapter 2. 57-91.
100. Smolensky,
Paul & Legendre, Géraldine. 2005. Formalizing
the principles I: Representation and processing in the mind/brain. In [1]. Chapter 5. 139-196.
101. Smolensky,
Paul & Legendre, Géraldine. 2005. Formalizing
the principles II: Optimization and grammar. In [1]. Chapter 6. 197-224.
102. Soderstrom,
Melanie, Mathis, Donald W. & Smolensky, Paul. 2005. Abstract genomic encoding of Universal Grammar in Optimality Theory. In
[1]. Chapter 21. 925-1002.
103. Smolensky,
P., Legendre, G., & Miyata, Y. (1993). Integrating connectionist and symbolic computation for the theory of
language. Current Science 64, 381-391. Reprinted in: V. Honavar & L. Uhr, Artificial
Intelligence and Neural Networks: Steps Toward Principled Integration,
509-530. Academic Press.
104. Smolensky,
P., Legendre, G., & Miyata, Y. (1992). Principles for an Integrated
Connectionist/Symbolic Theory of Higher Cognition. Technical Report
CU-CS-600-92, Department of Computer Science and 92-8, Institute of Cognitive
Science. University of Colorado at Boulder. (75 pages). Expanded to [1].
105. McNaughton, B. L. & Smolensky, P. (1991). Connectionist
and neural modeling: Converging in the hippocampus. In R. G. Lister &
H. J. Weingartner (Eds.), Perspectives on
Cognitive Neuroscience. Oxford University Press. 93-109.
106. Smolensky,
P. (1990). In defense of PTC: Reply to continuing commentary. Behavioral
and Brain Sciences. 13, 407-411.
107. Smolensky,
P. (1988). Putting Together Connectionism — again. Behavioral
and Brain Sciences, 11, 59-74.
108. Smolensky,
P. (1988). On the proper treatment of connectionism. Behavioral and
Brain Sciences, 11, 1-23. [Reprinted in D. Cole, J. Fetzer,
& T. Rankin (Eds.), (1990), Philosophy, Mind, and Cognitive Inquiry,
Dordrecht: Kluwer
Academic; A. I. Goldman, (1994), Readings in Philosophy and Cognitive
Science, Cambridge: MIT Press/Bradford Books; and [5]; Italian translation published as monograph [7]; Hungarian translation in A Cognitive Science
Reader, Budapest: Osiris Publishing House.
(1997)]
109. Smolensky,
P. (1987). Connectionist AI, symbolic AI, and the brain. Artificial
Intelligence Review, 1, 95-109. [French translation with added post scriptum in D. Andler, (Ed.). (1992). Introduction aux sciences cognitives, Editions Gallimard.]
110. Smolensky,
P. (1987). Connectionism and
implementation: Commentary on J. R. Anderson, Methodologies for studying
human knowledge. The Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 10.
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Others
111. Smolensky,
P., Fox, B., King, R., Lewis, C. (1988). Computer-aided
reasoned discourse, or, How to argue with a computer. In R. Guindon (Ed.), Cognitive Science and Its Applications
For Human-Computer Interaction. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. 109-62.
112. Smolensky,
P., Bell, B., Fox, B., King, R., & Lewis, C. (1987). Constraint-based hypertext for argumentation. Proceedings of
Hypertext-87. Chapel Hill, NC. November. 215-245.
113. Smolensky,
P., Monty, M. L. & Conway, E. (1984). Formalizing task descriptions for command specification and
documentation. Proceedings of the International Federation of
Information Processing Conference on Human-Computer Interaction. London,
England. September. 603-609.
114. Greenspan,
S. & Smolensky, P. (1984). DESCRIBE:
Environments for Specifying Commands and Retrieving Information By
Elaboration. In User centered system design, Part II, Technical Report
No. 8402. Institute for Cognitive Science, University of California at San
Diego. March.
115. O'Malley,
C., Smolensky, P, Bannon, L., Conway, E., Graham,
J., Sokolov, J., & Monty, M. L. (1983). A proposal for user centered system
documentation. Proceedings of the CHI 1983 Conference on Human Factors
in Computing Systems. Boston, MA. December.
116. Freedman,
B., Smolensky, P, & Weingarten, D. H. (1982). Monte Carlo evaluation of the continuum limit of (j4)4
and (j4)3 field theory. Physics
Letters B, 113, 481-486.
117. Smolensky,
P. (1981). Lattice Renormalization
of j4
Theory. Doctoral thesis in mathematical physics, Indiana University.
118. Bradbury,
K., Danziger, S., Smolensky, E., & Smolensky,
P. (1979). Public assistance, female
headship and economic well-being. Journal of Marriage and the Family,
519-535. [Reprinted in G. McDonald & F. Nye (Eds.), (1979), Family
policy, National Council on Family Relations.]
119. Cicchetti, C., Gillen, W., &
Smolensky, P. (1977). The
Marginal Cost and Pricing of Electricity: An Applied Approach.
Ballinger.
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Revised: June 9,
2004
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