Stevan Harnad

Stevan Harnad

Stevan Harnad
Born June 2, 1945(1945-06-02)
Budapest, Hungary
Residence Montréal, Canada
Nationality Hungarian
Fields Cognitive science
Institutions Université du Québec à Montréal, University of Southampton
Alma mater McGill University, Princeton University
Influences Donald O. Hebb, Julian Jaynes, Noam Chomsky, Alan Turing, Charles Darwin

Stevan Harnad (Hernád István Róbert, Hesslein István, born June 2, 1945, Budapest) is a cognitive scientist.

Contents

Career

Harnad was born in Budapest, Hungary. He did his undergraduate work at McGill University and his graduate work at Princeton University's Department of Psychology. He is currently Canada Research Chair in cognitive science at Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) and professor of cognitive science at the University of Southampton. He was elected external member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 2001. His research is on categorization,[1] communication,[2] cognition[3] and consciousness[4] and he has written extensively on categorical perception, symbol grounding, origin of language, lateralization, the Turing test, distributed cognition, scientometrics, and consciousness. Harnad is a former student of Donald O. Hebb[5] and Julian Jaynes.[6]

Activities in academic publishing

In 1978, Harnad was the founder[7] of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, of which he remained editor-in-chief until 2002.[8] In addition, he founded Psycoloquy (an early electronic journal sponsored by the American Psychological Association), CogPrints (an electronic eprint archive in the cognitive sciences hosted by the University of Southampton), and the American Scientist Open Access Forum[9] (since 1998). Harnad is an active promoter of open access (EPrints,[10] EnablingOpenScholarship (EOS),[11] Open Access Scholarly Information Sourcebook (OASIS),[12] SPARC Campus Open Access Policies[13]).

See also

References

  1. ^ Harnad, Stevan (2005). To Cognize is to Categorize: Cognition is Categorization. in Lefebvre, C. and Cohen, H., Eds. Handbook of Categorization. Elsevier.
  2. ^ Cangelosi, Angelo and Harnad, Stevan (2001). The adaptive advantage of symbolic theft over sensorimotor toil: Grounding language in perceptual categories. Evolution of Communication 4(1) 117-142
  3. ^ Harnad, Stevan (2006). The Annotation Game: On Turing (1950) on Computing, Machinery, and Intelligence. In: Epstein, Robert & Peters, Grace (Eds.) Parsing the Turing Test: Philosophical and Methodological Issues in the Quest for the Thinking Computer. Springer
  4. ^ Harnad, Stevan & Scherzer, Peter (2008). First, Scale Up to the Robotic Turing Test, Then Worry About Feeling. Artificial Intelligence in Medicine 44(2): 83-89
  5. ^ D. O. Hebb: Father of Cognitive Psychobiology (1904-1985)
  6. ^ What It Feels Like To Hear Voices: Fond Memories of Julian Jaynes
  7. ^ BBS Inaugural Editorial
  8. ^ BBS Valedictory Editorial
  9. ^ Archive of American Scientist Open Access Forum
  10. ^ EPrints
  11. ^ EnablingOpenScholarship (EOS)
  12. ^ Open Access Scholarly Information Sourcebook (OASIS)
  13. ^ SPARC Campus Open Access Policies

External links