Abstract
I present a case study of scientific discovery, where building two functional and behavioral approximations of neurons, one physical and the other computational, led to conceptual and implementation breakthroughs in a neural engineering laboratory. Such building of external systems that mimic target phenomena, and the use of these external systems to generate novel concepts and control structures, is a standard strategy in the new engineering sciences. I develop a model of the cognitive mechanism that connects such built external systems with internal models, and I examine how new discoveries, and consensus on discoveries, could arise from this external-internal coupling and the building process. The model is based on the emerging framework of common coding, which proposes a shared representation in the brain between the execution, perception, and imagination of movement. Copyright © 2009 Cognitive Science Society, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Chandrasekharan, S. (2009). Building to discover: A common coding model. Cognitive Science, 33(6), 1059–1086. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1551-6709.2009.01050.x
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