Cambridge University Press, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, (43), 2020
DOI: 10.1017/s0140525x19001705
Full text: Unavailable
Abstract Lieder and Griffiths rightly urge that computational cognitive models be constrained by resource usage, but they should go further. The brain's primary function is to regulate resource usage. As a consequence, resource usage should not simply select among algorithmic models of “aspects of cognition.” Rather, “aspects of cognition” should be understood as existing in the service of resource management.