- Pim Haselager
Infobox Scientist
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name = Willem F.G. "Pim" Haselager
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residence = Amsterdam / Groesbeek
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nationality = Dutch
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field =Cognitive Science
work_institution =Radboud University Nijmegen
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known_for =Frame problem ,Embodied Embedded Cognition
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footnotes =Willem F.G. "Pim" Haselager (1970??) is a Dutch philosopher-researcher in the
philosophy ofcognitive science . In theNetherlands he is part of a growing minority ofscientists andphilosophers advocating anembodied embedded perspective oncognition andintelligent behavior . Pim lives inGroesbeek andAmsterdam , theNetherlands . He holds a position at theRadboud University inNijmegen .Life and work
Haselager obtained a MA degree in
philosophy andpsychology . He obtained a PhD degree in 1995 at theFree University of Amsterdam , theNetherlands . He is particularly interested in the integration of empirical work (i.e. psychological experiments,brain imaging , computational modeling, androbotics ) with philosophical issues regardingknowledge and intelligent behavior.He analyzed the debate between proponents of classical
cognitive science andconnectionism on the nature ofrepresentation , in relation to the inability ofcomputational model s to deal with theframe problem (which is related to common sense behavior,knowledge andreasoning . He examined the consequences of this debate for the status offolk psychology More recently he extended his research by investigating the embodied embeddedness of
cognition (EEC ) in relation todynamical systems theory (DST). According to Haselager, both EEC and DST sharpen the debate on the role of representations in cognitive science. Currently he investigates the question of how far one can push non-representational ways ofmodeling intelligent behavior, experimentally and throughrobot simulations Publications
;Books
* Haselager, W.F.G. (1997). Cognitive science and folk psychology: The right frame of mind. London: Sage.;Articles, a selection
* Haselager, W.F.G., & Van Rappard, J.F.H. (1998). Connectionism, systematicity, and the frame problem. Minds and Machines, 8 (2), 161-179.
* Haselager, W.F.G. (1999). Neurodynamics and the revival of associationism in cognitive science. In A. Riegler, M. Peschl, & A. Von Stein (Eds.), Understanding representation in the cognitive sciences: Does representation need reality? (pp. 115-120). New York: Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publ.
* Haselager, W.F.G. (1999). On the potential of non-classical constituency. Acta Analytica, 22, 23-42.
* van Rooij, I., Bongers, R.M., & Haselager, W.F.G. (2002). A non-representational approach to imagined action. Cognitive Science, 26(3), 345-375.
* Haselager, W.F.G., Bongers, R.M. & van Rooij, I. (2003). Cognitive science, representations and dynamical systems theory. In W. Tschacher and J-P. Dauwalder (Eds.) The dynamical systems approach to cognition: Concepts and empirical paradigms based on self-organization, embodiment, and coordination Dynamics. Studies of Nonlinear Phenomena in Life Science - Vol. 10. (pp. 229-242). Singapore: World Scientific. (more info) pdf-file of penultimate draft
* Willems, D.J.M. & Haselager, W.F.G. (2003). Cooperative behavior in simulated reactive robots. In T. Heskes, P. Lucas, L. Vuurpijl, W. Wiegerinck (Eds). Proceedings of the 15th Belgium-Netherlands Conference on Artificial Intelligence (BNAIC). (pp. 355-362). Nijm
* Frank, S.L., & Haselager, W.F.G. (2006). Robust semantic systematicity and distributed representations in a connectionist model of sentence comprehension. In: R. Sun & N. Miyake (Eds.), Proceedings of the 28th annual conference of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 226-231), Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. pdf-fileExternal links
* [http://www.nici.ru.nl/~haselag Haselag website]
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