The following paragraphs are given in a -wrong order.
For questions 41--45, you are required to reorganize these
paragraphs into a coherent article by choosing from the list A--G to fill in
each numbered box. Two paragraphs have been placed for you in boxes. Mark your
answers on Answer Sheet 1.
A. "For decades, the cognitive and neural sciences have
treated mental processes as though they involved passing discrete packets of
information in a strictly feed-forward fashion from one cognitive module to the
next or in a string of individuated binary symbols--like a digital computer,"
said Spivey. "More recently, however, a growing number of studies, such as
ours, support dynamical-systems approaches to the mind. In this model,
perception and cognition are mathematically described as a continuous trajectory
through a high-dimensional mental space; the neural activation patterns flow
back and forth to produce nonlinear, self-organized, emergent properties--like a
biological organism."
B. The computer metaphor describes
cognition as being in a particular discrete state, for example, "on or off" or
in values of either zero or one, and in a static state until moving on. If there
was ambiguity, the model assumed that the mind jumps the gun to one state or the
other, and if it realizes it is wrong, it then makes a correction.
C. In his study, 42 students listened to instructions to click on pictures
of different objects on a computer screen. When the students heard a word, such
as "candle," and were presented with two pictures whose names did not sound
alike, such as a candle and a jacket, the trajectories of their mouse movements
were quite straight and directly to the candle. But when the students
heard "candle" and were presented with two pictures with similarly sounding
names, such as candle and candy, they were slower to click on the correct
object, and their mouse trajectories were much more curved. Spivey said that the
listeners started processing what they heard even before the entire word was
spoken.
D. In a new study published online this week in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (June 27--July 1), Michael
Spivey, a psycholinguist and associate professor of psychology at Cornell,
tracked the mouse movements of undergraduate students while working at a
computer. The findings provide compelling evidence that language comprehension
is a continuous process.
E. Whereas the older models of language
processing theorized that neural systems process words in a series of discrete
stages, the alternative model suggests that sensory input is processed
continuously so that even partial linguistic input can start "the dynamic
competition between, simultaneously active representations."
F.
"When there was ambiguity, the participants briefly didn't know which picture
was correct and so for several dozen milliseconds, they were in multiple states
at once. They didn't move all the way to one picture and then correct
their movement if they realized they were wrong, but instead they traveled
through an intermediate gray area," explained Spivey. "The degree of curvature
of the trajectory shows bow much the other object is competing for their
interpretation; the curve shows continuous competition. They sort of
partially heard the word both ways, and their resolution of the ambiguity was
gradual rather than discrete; it's a dynamical system."
G. "In
thinking of cognition as working as a biological organism does, on the other
hand, you do not have to be in one state or another like a computer, but can
have values in between-- you can be partially in one state and another, and then
eventually gravitate to a unique interpretation, as in finally recognizing a
spoken word,' Spivey said.
{{B}}Order:{{/B}}