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Douglas Hofstadter College Professor of Cognitive
Science and Computer Science; Adjunct Professor of History and Philosophy of Science,
Philosophy, Comparative Literature, and Psychology Ph.D. in physics, University of Oregon,
1975; Pulitzer Prize (General Nonfiction category), 1980, American Book Award (Science
Hardback category), 1980, for G�del, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid; Guggenheim
Fellow, 1980-81.
Research Interests
Douglas Hofstadter is College Professor of cognitive science and computer science,
director of the Center for Research on Concepts and Cognition, and adjunct professor of
philosophy, psychology, history and philosophy of science, and comparative literature. His
Pulitzer-prize-winning book Godel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid (1979) has had
considerable impact on people in many disciplines, ranging from philosophy to mathematics
to artificial intelligence to music, and beyond. He has written several other books and
many articles, and for a number of years wrote a column for Scientific American.
Hofstadter's research is driven by a long-standing interest in creativity and
consciousness. To study these abstract ideas in a concrete manner, he has focused on
designing and implementing, in collaboration with his graduate students, computer models
of high-level perception and analogical thought in carefully-designed idealized domains.
Several programs that perceive structures and discover subtle as well as simple analogies
by means of a tight interplay between concepts in long-term memory and perceptual agents
in short-term memory have been realized over the years; these include Copycat and
Tabletop. The Letter Spirit project, modeling the perception and creation of diverse
artistic styles, has been under way for several years, and a first implementation has
recently been completed. The Metacat project, which deepens Copycat by bringing in
episodic memory and some degree of self-awareness, has also been implemented in a
preliminary fashion.
Hofstadter also studies and writes about cognitive phenomena in a number of other areas.
Some of these are: the relationship between words and concepts; the mechanisms underlying
human error-making, especially in language; the nature of sexist language and default
imagery; the mechanisms underlying discovery and invention in mathematics, especially
geometry; the process of creative literary translation, especially of poetry; the
challenge of sorting the wheat from the chaff in AI and cognitive science; and the
philosophy of mind, consciousness, and the sense of self.
Facilities
Center for Research on Concepts and Cognition, 510 North Fess Avenue
Representative Publications
Hofstadter, D. R., Goedel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid, NY: Basic Books, 1979.
Hofstadter, D. R., The Mind's I: Fantasies and Reflections on Self and Soul, together with
Daniel C. Dennett, (Eds.), NY: Basic Books, 1981.
Hofstadter, D. R., Metamagical Themas: Questing for the Essence of Mind and Pattern, NY:
Basic Books, 1985.
Hofstadter, D. R., Ambigrammi: un microcosmo ideale per lo studio della creativita,
Florence, Italy: Hopeful Monster, 1987.}
Hofstadter, D. R., Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies: Computer Models of the
Fundamental Mechanisms of Thought, (together with the Fluid Analogies Research Group), NY:
Basic Books, 1995.
Hofstadter, D. R., Le Ton beau de Marot: In Praise of the Music of Language, NY: Basic
Books, 1997.
Hofstadter, D. R., translation of Pushkin's novel in verse "Eugene Onegin", NY:
Basic Books, 1999.
Hofstadter, D. R., Speechstuff and thoughtstuff: Musings on the resonances created by
words and phrases via the subliminal perception of their buried parts. In Sture Allen
(ed.), Of Thoughts and Words: The Relation between Language and Mind. Proceedings of the
Nobel Symposium 92, 1995, London/New Jersey: World Scientific Publ., 217-267.
Hofstadter, D. R., On seeing A's and seeing As. Stanford Humanities Review 4,2 (1995) pp.
109-121.
Research Projects:
A self-watching cognitive architecture for analogy-making.
The Metacat project is an attempt to computationally model certain key aspects of human
cognition. It has its foundations in an earlier project called Copycat, a computer model
of high-level perception and analogy-making. The central theme underlying Copycat is the
idea of nondeterministic, stochastic processing distributed among a large number of small
computational agents, which work on different aspects of an analogy problem
simultaneously, at different speeds, thereby achieving a kind of differential parallelism.
All processing occurs through the collective actions of many agents working together,
without any higher-level, executive process directing the overall course of events. Thus,
Copycat lies firmly within the paradigm of emergent computation. At the same time,
however, it incorporates many ideas from the more traditional paradigm of symbolic AI,
inhabiting a kind of middle ground between these two opposites. Current research is
concerned with extending the model in a way that will allow it to create much richer
representations of the analogies it makes. This involves the idea of 'self-watching' --
the ability to perceive and remember patterns that occur in its own processing as it
solves analogy problems. Based on this ability, Metacat will be able to understand and
explain its answers in a way that Copycat cannot, and will eventually be able to perceive
analogies between analogies.
Recent References:
Hofstadter, D. R., and Marshall, J. B. D. A Self-Watching Cognitive Architecture of
High-Level Perception and Analogy-Making. TR 100, Indiana University Center for Research
on Concepts and Cognition, 1993.
Marshall, J. B. D., and Hofstadter, D. R., Beyond copycat: Incorporating self-watching
into a computer model of high-level perception and analogy-making, In M.Gasser (ed.),
Online Proceedings of the 1996 Midwest Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science
Conference. URL http://www.cs.indiana.edu/event/maics96/Proceedings/
Marshall/marshall.html
Hofstadter, D. R., and Marshall, J. B. D. From Copycat to Metacat: Developing a
Self-Watching Framework for Analogy-Making. TR 115, Indiana University Center for Research
on Concepts and Cognition, 1997. To appear in Tony Veale (Ed.), Proceedings of the Mind
II: Computational Models of Creative Cognition Conference, Dublin City University, Dublin,
Ireland, 1997.
An emergent model of the perception and creation of alphabetic style.
This project is an attempt to model central aspects of human high-level perception and
creativity on a computer. It is based on the belief that creativity is an automatic
outcome of the existence of sufficiently flexible and context-sensitive concepts---what we
call fluid concepts. Accordingly, our goal is to implement a model of fluid concepts in a
challenging domain. Not surprisingly, the Letter Spirit project is a very complex
undertaking and requires complex dynamic memory structures, as well as a sophisticated
control structure based on the principles of emergent computation, wherein complex
high-level behavior emerges as a statistical consequence of many small computational
actions. The full realization of such a model will, we believe, shed light on the
mechanisms of human creativity.
The specific focus of Letter Spirit is the creative act of artistic letter-design. The aim
is to model how the 26 lowercase letters of the roman alphabet can be rendered in many
different but internally coherent styles. The program addresses two important aspects of
letterforms: the categorical sameness possessed by letters belonging to a given style (
e.g., Helvetica). Starting with one or more seed letters representing the beginnings of a
style, the program will attempt to create the rest of the alphabet in such a way that all
26 letters share that same style, or spirit.
Recent References:
Collaborators: Gary McGraw, John Rehling and Robert Goldstone. Letter perception: Toward a
conceptual approach, in Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive
Science Society, Atlanta, 1994, pp. 613-618.
McGraw, G., and Hofstadter, D. R. Letter spirit: An architecture for creativity in a
microdomain. In P. Torasso (ed.), { Advances in Artificial Intelligence: Lecture Notes in
Artificial Intelligence}, Springer Verlag, 1994, pp. 65-70.
McGraw, G., and Hofstadter, D. R. Perception and creation of diverse alphabetic style. In
AISB Quarterly -- Newsletter of the Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and
Simulation of Behaviour, Special Theme: AI and Creativity, Guest-Editor: Terry Dartnall,
Autumn 1993, No. 85, University of Sussex, UK, pp. 42-49.
Gary E. McGraw, Jr. Letter Spirit (Part One): Emergent High-level Perception of Letters
Using Fluid Concepts. Ph.D. Thesis, Indiana University, 1995.
Rehling, J. and Hofstadter, D. R. Letter Spirit: Automating Creative Design. TR 116,
Indiana University, Center for Research on Concepts and Cognition. To appear in Tony Veale
Ed., Proceedings of the Mind II: Computational Models of Creative Cognition Conference,
Dublin City University, Dublin, Ireland. 1997.
Rehling, J. and Hofstadter, D.R. The Parallel Terraced Scan: An Optimization for an
Agent-Oriented Architecture. TR 114, Indiana University, Center for Research on Concepts
and Cognition. In Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Intelligent
Processing Systems 1997, Beijing, China. 1997.
Phone: (812) 855-6965
Internet: [email protected]
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