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'''Neural computation''' is information processing performed by networks of [[neuron]]s. Neural computation is affiliated with the philosophical tradition known as [[Computational Theory of Mind]], also referred to as computationalism, which advances the thesis that neural computation explains cognition. The first persons to propose an account of neural activity as being computational was [[Warren Sturgis McCulloch|Warren McCullock]] and [[Walter Pitts]] in their seminal 1943 paper, A Logical Calculus of the Ideas Immanent in Nervous Activity. There are three general branches of computationalism, including classicism, [[
When comparing the three main traditions of the computational theory of mind, as well as the different possible forms of computation in the brain, it is helpful to define what we mean by computation in a general sense. Computation is the processing of vehicles, otherwise known as variables or entities, according to a set of rules. A rule in this sense is simply an instruction for executing a manipulation on the current state of the variable, in order to produce an specified output. In other words, a rule dictates which output to produce given a certain input to the computing system. A computing system is a mechanism whose components must be functionally organized to process the vehicles in accordance with the established set of rules. The types of vehicles processed by a computing system determines which type of computations it performs. Traditionally, in cognitive science there have been two proposed types of computation related to neural activity - [[
Neural computation can be studied for example by building [[models of neural computation]].
There is a scientific journal dedicated to this subject, ''[[Neural Computation (journal)|Neural Computation]]''.
[[Artificial neural network]]s (ANN) is subfield of the research area [[machine learning]]. Work on ANNs has been somewhat inspired by knowledge of neural computation.
<ref>Piccinini, G. and Bahar, S. (2013), Neural Computation and the Computational Theory of Cognition. Cognitive Science, 37: 453-488. doi:10.1111/cogs.12012</ref>▼
==References==
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:Biology]]
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▲<ref>Piccinini, G. and Bahar, S. (2013), Neural Computation and the Computational Theory of Cognition. Cognitive Science, 37: 453-488. doi:10.1111/cogs.12012</ref>
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