A pointer's hypothesis of general intelligence evolved from domain-specific demands

A higher-order function may evolve phylogenetically if it is demanded by multiple domain-specific modules. Task-specificity to solve a unique adaptive problem (e.g., foraging or mating) should be distinguished from function-specificity to deal with a common computational demand (e.g., numeracy, verb...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Behavioral and brain sciences 2017, Vol.40, p.e221-e221, Article e221
1. Verfasser: Wang, X. T. (Xiao-Tian)
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description A higher-order function may evolve phylogenetically if it is demanded by multiple domain-specific modules. Task-specificity to solve a unique adaptive problem (e.g., foraging or mating) should be distinguished from function-specificity to deal with a common computational demand (e.g., numeracy, verbal communication) required by many tasks. A localized brain function is likely a result of such common computational demand.
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source MEDLINE; Cambridge Journals
subjects Cognition & reasoning
Computational neuroscience
Efficiency
Evolution
Hypotheses
Intelligence
Mating
Memory
Numeracy
Open Peer Commentary
Phylogeny
Verbal communication
title A pointer's hypothesis of general intelligence evolved from domain-specific demands
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