protothinker.com
ProtoThinker | ProtoThinker: A Model of the Mind is a Windows software application that features a simple computer model of an extremely complex entity -- the human mind. ProtoThinker (PT) is a simulated person whose artificial mindfacilitates
http://www.protothinker.com/Introduction
I am therefore, precisely speaking, only a thinking thing, that is, a mind. " [René. If you want to know what intelligence is, or what it takes to have a thought, you need a recipe for creating intelligence or assembling a thought (or a thinker of thoughts) out of parts you already understand. ". Fred Dretske, "If You Can't Make One, You Don't Know How It Works". Computers are machines that thinkers have constructed out of parts they understand. ProtoThinker: A Model of the Mind. Can humans speak because...
cemast.illinoisstate.edu
Faculty | Center for Mathematics, Science & Technology
http://cemast.illinoisstate.edu/faculty
Center for Mathmatics Science and Technology. Jump over the College navigation bar. Jump over the site's masthead's navigation bar. Jump over the site's section navigation. Science Education at ISU. Faculty Support and Programs. CeMaST Research and Publications. Project EDDIE (Environmental Data-Driven Inquiry and Exploration) aims to introduce large, long-term, and sensor-based dataset analysis activities into undergraduate classrooms to improve quantitative skills and reasoning, to develop scientific d...
nkuneuroscience.blogspot.com
NKU Cognitive Neuroscience: July 2009
http://nkuneuroscience.blogspot.com/2009_07_01_archive.html
A blog for NKU faculty and students interested in addressing a broad range of topics on the Mind-Brain from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. Thursday, July 30, 2009. Cognitive Neuroscience Links 07/30/2009. The rest of my favorite links. Wednesday, July 29, 2009. Cognitive Neuroscience Links 07/29/2009. Intelligence and EEG phase reset: A two compartmental model of phase shift and lock. ScienceDirect - NeuroImage :. A Patchwork Mind: How Your Parents' Genes Shape Your Brain. Tuesday, July 28, 2009.