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1

D'Autrechy, C. Lynne. Autoplan: A self-processing network model for an extended blocks world planning environment. College Park, Md: University of Maryland, 1990.

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2

D'Autrechy, C. Lynne. Autoplan: A self-processing network model for an extended blocks world planning environment. College Park, Md: University of Maryland, 1990.

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3

IBM Data Management Solutions Education Services. IBM Informix extended parallel server administration: Version 2. [United States?]: IBM, 2001.

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4

Cypher, Robert. The SIMD model of parallel computation. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1994.

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5

Stoica, Ion. A simple hyperbolic model for communication in parallel processing environments. Hampton, VA: Institute for Computer Applications in Science and Engineering, NASA Langley Research Center, 1994.

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6

Gupta, Vineet. Chu spaces: A model for concurrency. Stanford, Calif: Dept. of Computer Science, Stanford University, 1994.

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7

Actors: A model of concurrent computation in distributed systems. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 1986.

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8

Bahramparvar, M. R. The application of parallel processing techniques to model based fault diagnostics. Salford: University ofSalford, 1989.

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9

Crookston, Nicholas L. User's guide to the parallel processing extension of the prognosis model. Ogden, UT (324 25th St., Ogden 84401): U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Intermountain Research Station, 1991.

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10

Olsson, Ronald A. The JR programming language: Concurrent programming in an extended Java. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2004.

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11

Olsson, Ronald A. The JR programming language: Concurrent programming in an extended Java. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2004.

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12

Argante, Erco. CoCa: A model for parallelization of high energy physics software. Eindhoven: Eindhoven University of Technology, 1998.

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13

Kienzie, Jorg. Open multithreaded transactions: A transaction model for concurrent object-oriented programming. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2003.

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14

Harper, Richard. Investigation of the applicability of a functional programming model to fault tolerant parallel processing for knowledge-based systems. Hampton, Va: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Langley Research Center, 1990.

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15

Bernd, Kleinjohann, ed. From model-driven design to resource management for distributed embedded systems: IFIP TC 10 Working Conference on Distributed and Parallel Embedded Systems (DIPES 2006), October 11-13, 2006, Braga, Portugal. New York: Springer, 2006.

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16

A, Reggia James, McFadden Francis M, University of Maryland at College Park., United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., and National Science Foundation (U.S.), eds. Autoplan: A self-processing network model for an extended blocks world planning environment. College Park, Md: University of Maryland, 1990.

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17

Grüninger, Michael John. Model theory for parallel distributed processing. 1989.

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18

Jackendoff, Ray. A Parallel Architecture Model of Language Processing. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199988693.013.0028.

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19

Robert Cypher Jorge L. C. Sanz. The SIMD Model of Parallel Computation. Springer, 2011.

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20

Sanz, Jorge L. C., and Robert Cypher. The SIMD Model of Parallel Computation. Springer, 1998.

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21

Chang, Si-En. Extended restricted and-parallelism execution model and abstract machine for logic programming. 1990.

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22

Olsson, Ronald A., and Aaron W. Keen. The JR Programming Language: Concurrent Programming in an Extended Java. Springer, 2013.

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23

Argante, Erco. CoCa: A model for parallelization of high energy physics software. Eindhoven University of Technology, 1998.

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24

Huster, Carl R. A parallel/vector Monte Carlo MESFET model for shared memory machines. 1992.

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25

(Editor), Bernd Kleinjohann, Lisa Kleinjohann (Editor), Ricardo J. Machado (Editor), Carlos Pereira (Editor), and P. S. Thiagarajan (Editor), eds. From Model-Driven Design to Resource Management for Distributed Embedded Systems: IFIP TC 10 Working Conference on Distributed and Parallel Embedded Systems ... Federation for Information Processing). Springer, 2006.

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26

Mundy, Peter. A Neural Networks, Information-Processing Model of Joint Attention and Social-Cognitive Development. Edited by Philip David Zelazo. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199958474.013.0010.

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A neural networks approach to the development of joint attention can inform the study of the nature of human social cognition, learning, and symbolic thought process. Joint attention development involves increments in the capacity to engage in simultaneous or parallel processing of information about one’s own attention and the attention of other people. Infant practice with joint attention is both a consequence and an organizer of a distributed and integrated brain network involving frontal and parietal cortical systems. In this chapter I discuss two hypotheses that stem from this model. One is that activation of this distributed network during coordinated attention enhances the depth of information processing and encoding beginning in the first year of life. I also propose that with development joint attention becomes internalized as the capacity to socially coordinate mental attention to internal representations. As this occurs the executive joint attention network makes vital contributions to the development of human social cognition and symbolic thinking.
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27

United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., ed. Turbulence modeling of free shear layers for high performance aircraft. San Jose, CA: MCAT Institute, 1993.

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28

Turbulence modeling of free shear layers for high-performance aircraft. San Jose, CA: MCAT Institute, 1993.

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29

United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., ed. Turbulence modeling of free shear layers for high performance aircraft. San Jose, CA: MCAT Institute, 1993.

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30

United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration., ed. Turbulence modeling of free shear layers for high-performance aircraft. San Jose, CA: MCAT Institute, 1993.

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31

Bratman, Michael E. A Planning Agent’s Self-Governance Over Time. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190867850.003.0011.

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This essay develops a model of a planning agent’s self-governance over time. Such diachronic self-governance involves planned temporally extended activity, synchronic self-governance at times along the way, appropriate cross-temporal interconnections across relevant attitudes along the way, and standpoints that involve an end of one’s diachronic self-governance. This end helps support coordination between relevant synchronic self-governance and relevant cross-temporal continuities in plan. The explanation of the relevant cross-temporal interconnections appeals to a parallel between a single planning agent’s self-governance over time and several planning agents acting together in shared intentional ways: in such self-governance one is, so to speak, “acting together” with oneself over time. Finally, the relevant planned temporally extended activity implicitly specifies a temporal footprint within which anticipated future regret can play a role in determining whether there is diachronic self-governance. This helps explain why drinking the toxin in Kavka’s puzzle will normally not be a case of diachronic self-governance.
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32

Colombo, Matteo, Elizabeth Irvine, and Mog Stapleton, eds. Andy Clark and His Critics. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190662813.001.0001.

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Andy Clark is a leading philosopher and cognitive scientist. The fruits of his work have been diverse and lasting. They have had an extraordinary impact throughout philosophy, psychology, neuroscience, and robotics. The extended mind hypothesis, the power of parallel distributed processing, the role of language in opening up novel paths for thinking, the flexible interface between biological minds and artificial technologies, the significance of representation in explanations of intelligent behaviour, the promise of the predictive processing framework to unify the cognitive sciences: these are just some of the ideas explored in Clark’s work that have been picked up by many researchers and that have been contributing to intense debate across the sciences of mind and brain. This volume provides the first interdisciplinary, critical engagement with Clark’s work; it includes contributions of authors from several disciplines, offering a fresh perspective on key questions in the sciences of mind and brain.
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33

Baune, Bernhard T. Cognitive Dimensions of Major Depressive Disorder. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198835554.001.0001.

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Cognitive Dimensions of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) examines the key clinical and pathophysiological characteristics and treatment options of MDD. The volume emphasizes that while the traditional model of depression implicates mood as the primary symptom cluster, a more recently published conceptual understanding of depression has been extended to consider cognitive function as more than just a symptom. It furthers our understanding of the central role of the cognitive dimension for the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of MDD. It reviews the key cognitive dimensions of depression comprising impaired cognitive and emotional processes of cognitive function, emotion processing, and social cognitive processing. It focuses on the cognitive and emotional dimensions of depression and offers extended and novel diagnostic and treatment approaches ranging from pharmacological to psychological interventions targeting those dimensions of depression.
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34

Kukkonen, Karin. Probability Designs. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190050955.001.0001.

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Probability Designs develops a comprehensive account of the predictions and probabilities at play in literature, in particular novels. Novels, it is argued, provide readers with a designed sensory flow in their plots, style, and relation to other texts. The model traces, based on research in predictive processing, how this designed sensory flow revises readers’ expectations and leads them to engage in exploratory thinking. The model is then embedded in a co-evolutionary account of how language, writing, and fictionality enable literary designer environments in which thought can be extended beyond the everyday. Literary form, as traced in probability designs, performs particular cognitive work in these designer environments.
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35

Karoly, Paul. Chronic Pain and Psychopathology. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190627898.003.0010.

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This chapter presents a motivational model designed to forge conceptual and empirical links among chronic pain perception, cognitive-affective pain processing, everyday task performance, and the emergence of psychopathology. Organized around the GRASSP perspective (introduced in chapter 1), the current chapter first addresses the nature of multi-leveled (top-down and bottom-up) regulatory/control systems and the hypothesized motivational mechanisms around which such systems are organized. Based on the twin premises that (a) dysfunctions of the goal-guided, self-regulatory system underlie most forms of psychopathology, and (b) chronic pain can disrupt goal- and self-regulatory system functioning, the chapter seeks to locate chronic pain and two prominent forms of psychological disturbance—depression and anxiety—within a broad, heuristic “motivational context.” Among the key explanatory building blocks of the hypothesized model are goal episodes, extended goal striving processes, and four moderation pathways hypothesized to connect pain-related disruptions of self-regulation to the eventual emergence of depression and/or anxiety.
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36

Mitchinson, Ben. Attention and orienting. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199674923.003.0027.

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This chapter describes the close relationship between the mental faculty of attention and the physical faculty of orienting, and the importance of this relationship to the construction of artificial biomimetic systems. It reviews the importance of physical orienting to natural motor behavior, which places attention management at the core of all behaviors (“orienting is acting”), and the concomitant social role of physical orienting both in expressing and revealing the focus of a mind. The article highlights the efficiency of top-down and bottom-up processing for behavioral control, using map-based saliency processing as a model, and the suitability of map-based algorithms for parallel or bespoke computation. Given this, and the similar nature of the challenges faced by artificial and natural sensorimotor systems, it is argued that attention management may be a, if not the, key component of future artificial motor control systems.
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37

Mole, Christopher. Attention. Edited by Eric Margolis, Richard Samuels, and Stephen P. Stich. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195309799.013.0009.

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The article focuses on Broadbent's approach to the explanation of attention. Broadbent shows that one's information-processing resources have sufficient capacity to encode the simple physical properties of all the stimuli that one is presented with, but have only a limited capacity for the encoding of the semantic properties of those stimuli. The resulting model depicts perceptual processing as proceeding in two stages. The first stage entails that a large capacity sensory system processes the physical features of all stimuli in parallel. A subset of the representations generated by the large capacity system are selected to be passed on to a second perceptual system, which has a smaller processing capacity, and which has the job of processing the stimuli's semantic properties. Broadbent's theory would explain that pre-bottleneck processing is responsible for the detection of simple physical features, and also for own-name detection. The phenomenology of one's shifting awareness in conditions of binocular rivalry is naturally described as the manifestation of a competition, and perhaps of a biased competition.
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