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41 Expansionsbestrebungen
Expansionsbestrebungen
expansionist tendencies;
• Expansionsbremse expansion curb;
• Expansionsdrang expansionism;
• Expansionsengpass expansion bottleneck;
• Expansionsgebiete growth fields;
• Expansionsgelände expansion site;
• Expansionsgrundlage basis for expansion;
• Expansionskraft expansionary force;
• Politik auf einen kräftigen Expansionskurs umstellen to switch policy to a strongly expansionary line;
• Expansionskurve expansion path;
• Expansionsphase expansionary phase;
• Expansionspolitik expansionism, expansionary (expansionist) policy, policy of expansion;
• Expansionsprognose expansion forecast;
• Expansionsprogramm expansion program(me);
• Expansionsprozess process of expansion;
• Expansionsrate rate of expansion, growth rate;
• schnelles Expansionstempo rapid pace of expansion;
• Expansionstendenz expansionist tendency;
• Expansionsvorhaben expansion plans.
vereiteln, Expansionsbestrebungen
to frustrate expansion;
• durch einen Gegenauftrag vereiteln to countermine;
• Zwangsvollstreckung vereiteln to obstruct process. -
42 Wachstumsgebiet
Wachstumsgebiet
growth zone (field, area);
• Wachstumsgrad growth term;
• Wachstumsgrenze growth limit;
• Wachstumshormon growth hormone;
• Wachstumsimpuls impetus towards expansion;
• Wachstumsindustrie growth (science-based) industry;
• kein Wachstumsjahr no-growth year;
• langsames Wachstumsjahr slow-growth year;
• Wachstumskapazität capacity for growth;
• Wachstumskatalysator catalyst for growth;
• Wachstumskurve growth curve;
• Wachstumsmarkt market growth;
• Wachstumsmessung growth measurement;
• Wachstumsmodell growth model;
• Wachstumsmöglichkeit growth potential;
• nicht genutzte volkswirtschaftliche Wachstumsmöglichkeiten national loss in potential output;
• Wachstumsmöglichkeiten beschneiden to cut back growth potentials;
• Wachstumsmotor driving force for growth;
• Wachstumsnachweis growth record;
• Wachstumsperiode growth era, growing season;
• geringe Wachstumsperiode slow economic growth;
• langfristige Wachstumsperiode long-term growth, period of prolonged growth;
• Wachstumsphase growth phase;
• Wachstumspol growth pole;
• Wachstumspolitik growth policy;
• Wachstumspotenzial growth potential;
• Wachstumsprognose growth forecast;
• Wachstumsprogramm growth program(me);
• Wachstumsprozess growth process, up-growth;
• wirtschaftlicher Wachstumsprozess economic growth march. -
43 (mehrjähriges) Forschungsrahmenprogramm
Forschungsrahmenprogramm, (mehrjähriges)
[multiannual] framework research program(me);
• Forschungsrat Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (Br.), National Research Development Corporation (US);
• europäischer Forschungsraum European area of research;
• europäischen Forschungsraum schaffen to create a Europe of research;
• Forschungsstadium research phase (stage);
• Forschungsstelle research unit (secretariat, center, US, centre, Br.);
• Forschungsstipendium [research] scholarship, research studentship (Br.);
• Forschungstätigkeit exploration work, research [effort];
• Forschungstätigkeit im Bereich der Betriebsführung management science research;
• gemeinsames Forschungsunternehmen joint research;
• Forschungsvernetzung research networks;
• Forschungsvorhaben research project;
• Forschungszuschüsse research subsidiesBusiness german-english dictionary > (mehrjähriges) Forschungsrahmenprogramm
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44 impresión1
1 = excitement, impression, perception, shock, illusion.Nota: Falso amigo.Ex. If done effectively, displays can add interest and even excitement to the process of information discovery.Ex. This planning phase involves moving from a vague impression that a thesaurus might be useful to a fairly precise profile for the thesaurus.Ex. Nevertheless, citation indexes do seek to link documents according to their content (or at least the perception of their content held by the author of the source work).Ex. The shock of Sputnik precipitated a near-frantic concern about our technological complacency, sending the country into a crash program of science education and space exploration in order to regain a lost prestige.Ex. A motion picture is a length of film, with or without recorded sound, bearing a sequence of images that create the illusion of movement when projected in rapid succession.----* causar buena impresión = impress, come across.* causar impresión = make + impression.* causar una buena primera impresión = make + a good first impression.* causar una impresión = leave + an impression, make + an impression.* causar una primera impresión = make + a first impression.* crear una buena impresión en = make + a good impression on.* dar la impresión = convey + impression, strike + Pronombre Personal, give + the impression that, confer + impression, come off as.* dar la impresión de = contrive, conjure up + a picture of, come across as.* dar la impresión de seriedad en el trabajo = appear + businesslike.* dar mala impresión = look + bad.* dar una falsa impresión = keep up + facade, put on + an act.* dar una impresión = make + an impression, leave + an impression, present + an image.* dar una impresión de = give + an impression of.* dar una impresión equivocada = send + the wrong signals.* dejar una impresión = leave with + the impression, leave + an impression, leave + an imprint, make + an impression.* impresión duradera = lasting impression.* impresión imborrable = indelible impression.* no dar una impresión clara = send + mixed signals.* obtener una impresión = gain + picture.* primera impresión = first impression.* sacar una impresión = gain + picture.* tener la impresión = have + the impression, get + the impression.* tener la impresión de que = get + the feeling that. -
45 terminal
adj.1 final.2 terminal.es un enfermo terminal he's terminally illf.1 terminal.2 outlet connection, terminal.m.terminal ( Elec & computing).terminal videotexto videotext terminal* * *► adjetivo1 (último) final, terminal1 (estación) terminus2 (en aeropuerto) terminal1 (de ordenador) terminal2 (eléctrico) terminal\estación terminal terminusterminal aérea air terminalterminal conversacional conversational terminalterminal interactivo interactive terminal* * *noun f. adj.* * *1. ADJ1) (=final) [enfermedad, estación] terminal2) (Bot) [hoja, rama] terminal2.SM [a veces]SF (Elec, Inform) terminal3.SF [a veces]SM (Aer, Náut) terminal; [de autobuses, trenes] terminusterminal de pasajeros, terminal de viajeros — passenger terminal
* * *I1) (Bot) terminal2) <enfermedad/caso> terminalII1) (Elec) terminal2) (en algunas regiones f) (Inf) terminal3) (Chi) terminal IIIIIIfemenino ( de autobuses) terminus, bus station; (Aviac) terminal* * *I1) (Bot) terminal2) <enfermedad/caso> terminalII1) (Elec) terminal2) (en algunas regiones f) (Inf) terminal3) (Chi) terminal IIIIIIfemenino ( de autobuses) terminus, bus station; (Aviac) terminal* * *terminal11 = console, display terminal, search station.Ex: Consoles would replace the conventional catalogue and would provide the facility for browsing now afforded by the open stacks.
Ex: A librarian can use the display terminal at his or her desk to search all catalogs and files online.Ex: The article 'The double-up program' describes an easy way to utilize multiple CD-ROM products on the same search station.* conexión de terminal dedicada = dedicated terminal connection.* emulación de terminales de ordenador = terminal emulation.* interrogar un terminal = poll + terminal.* operador de terminal = terminal operator.* terminal remoto = remote terminal.* terminal con pantalla sensible al tacto = touch terminal.* terminal de conexión mediante llamada telefónica = dial-in terminal.* terminal de devolución = discharge terminal.* terminal de impresión = typewriter terminal.* terminal de ordenador = terminal, computer terminal.* terminal de préstamo = issue terminal.* terminal en línea = online terminal.* terminal inteligente = intelligent terminal.* terminal tonto = dumb terminal.* utilizar un terminal = sit at + terminal.terminal22 = terminus.Nota: Plural terminuses.Ex: The article is entitled 'The terminal and the terminus: the prospect of free online bibliographic searching'.
terminal33 = life threatening.Ex: The study also investigated whether persons who had consulted the book before committing suicide had life threatening medical illnesses.
* en fase terminal = terminally ill.* enfermo en fase terminal = terminally ill patient.* enfermos en fase terminal, los = terminally ill, the.* enfermos terminales, los = terminally ill, the.* enfermo terminal = terminally ill patient.* ficha de dígito terminal = terminal digit card.terminal44 = overhang.Nota: En tipografía, trazo decorativo de las astas de algunas letras.Ex: Alternatively vowels could be cast without accents as kerned letters, with bodies only half as wide as usual, part of the face being cast on the overhang, or kern.
* con terminales = serifed.* terminal ahorquillado = forked serif.* terminal curviforme = bracketed serif.* terminal en porra = clubbed serif.* * *A ( Bot) terminalB ‹enfermedad/caso› terminallos enfermos terminales the terminally illA ( Elec) terminalB ( Inf)( en algunas regiones f):tb terminal informático or de computadora or ( Esp) de ordenador terminal, computer terminalD terminal3 (↑ terminal (3))1 (de autobuses) terminus, bus station2 ( Aviac) terminalCompuestos:freight terminalpassenger terminalnerve ending( AmL) fish warehouse* * *
terminal adjetivo ‹enfermedad/caso› terminal;
■ sustantivo masculino (Elec, Inf) terminal
■ sustantivo femenino ( de autobuses) terminus, bus station;
(Aviac, Inf) terminal
terminal
I m Elec Inform terminal
II f Av terminal
(de autobús) terminus: está buscando la terminal sur de autobuses, he is looking for the Southern Bus Station
III adj (fase, paciente, enfermedad) terminal
' terminal' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
borne
- cabezal
- espigón
- estación
English:
air terminal
- terminal
- terminus
- depot
- on
- station
- terminally
- VDT
- work
* * *♦ adj1. [enfermedad] terminal;es un enfermo (en fase) terminal he's terminally ill2. Bot terminal♦ nm1. Informát terminalAm terminal de computadora computer terminal; Esp terminal de ordenador computer terminal;terminal de videotexto videotext terminal2. Elec terminal;terminal negativo/positivo negative/positive terminal♦ nf[de aeropuerto] terminal; [de autobuses] terminus;en la terminal nacional/internacional in the national/international terminalterminal aérea air terminal;terminal de carga freight terminal;terminal de contenedores container terminal;terminal de pasajeros passenger terminal;Am terminal pesquera fish warehouse;terminal de vuelo air terminal* * *I adj terminal;estado terminal MED terminal phaseII m INFOR terminalterminal de salidas AVIA departure terminal;terminal de autobuses bus station, bus terminal* * *terminal adj: terminal♦ terminalmente adv* * *terminal n2. (en aeropuerto) air terminal -
46 оканчивающийся
Оканчивающийся на (о номерах, обозначениях и т.п.)Use flush socket No. R18L-F209 for tool size ending in 32, 33 or 36. (... для типоразмеров, оканчивающихся на 32, 33 или 36)Около - about, approximately, in the neighborhood of, close to, some (приблизительно); by, alongside (рядом); near (вблизи); past (мимо)The range of error from about 12 percent of 1 psia to 26 percent at critical pressure mitigates against its use.The open cycle gas turbine burning semiclean fuel has the lowest cost of electricity and an overall efficiency of approximately 38 percent.The total test program contained in the neighborhood of 200 test points.Our DEC DATA SYSTEMS will save us close to a million dollars in the next two years alone.Currently some 50 units are fitted with Phase I combustor hardware.It will be seen that the new trains are some six times better than the old trains which they replaced.The magnitudes of the film thicknesses noted alongside the figures are the minimum discernible values within the film.Fig. 1 illustrates the flow past a blade element.The isoelectric point is near pH3 for the dicarboxylic amino acids and above 1.5 for the basic amino acids.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > оканчивающийся
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47 последующий
1. subsequent payment2. consequential3. consequentual4. ensuing5. later6. subsequentпоследующий; дополнительный платеж — subsequent payment
7. succedent8. succeeding9. supervening10. following11. after12. posterior13. successiveАнтонимический ряд: -
48 совершенствование
1. improvement2. perfection3. enhancement4. developmentСинонимический ряд:улучшение (сущ.) улучшениеРусско-английский большой базовый словарь > совершенствование
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49 сокращать
1. debulk2. diminish3. pare4. scale downурезать расходы; сокращать расходы — put down expenses
5. shrink6. slacken7. slash8. slow downпостепенно сокращать; свёртывать — phase down
сокращать; стекать; сокращенный — run down
9. abbreviate10. cut downсокращать наполовину; сокращенный наполовину — cut by half
постепенно сокращать — to scale smth. down
сокращающий; сокращение — boiling down
11. retrench12. cutснижать, сокращать — to cut down
13. abridgeable14. abridged15. contracted16. contracting17. cut back18. divide out19. shortened20. shortening21. shortens22. shorten; abbreviate; abridge; reduce; curtail; short; brief23. cancel24. condense25. contract26. dock27. prune28. reduceСинонимический ряд:1. увольнять (глаг.) выгонять; выпирать; вытуривать; вышвыривать; вышибать; давать расчет; отказывать от места; прогонять; рассчитывать; увольнять2. укорачивать (глаг.) укорачиватьАнтонимический ряд: -
50 язык
м. languageдексриптивный язык; описательный язык — descriptive language
Синонимический ряд:стиль (сущ.) слог; стиль -
51 Soares, Mário Alberto Nobre Lopes
(1924-)Lawyer, staunch oppositionist to the Estado Novo, a founder of Portugal's Socialist Party (PS), key leader of post-1974 democratic Portugal, and twice-elected president of the republic (1986-91; 1991-96). Mário Soares was born on 7 December 1924, in Lisbon, the son of an educator and former cabinet officer of the ill-fated First Republic. An outstanding student, Soares received a degree in history and philosophy from the University of Lisbon (1951) and his law degree from the same institution (1957). A teacher and a lawyer, the young Soares soon became active in various organizations that opposed the Estado Novo, starting in his student days and continuing into his association with the PS. He worked with the organizations of several oppositionist candidates for the presidency of the republic in 1949 and 1958 and, as a lawyer, defended a number of political figures against government prosecution in court. Soares was the family attorney for the family of General Humberto Delgado, murdered on the Spanish frontier by the regime's political police in 1965. Soares was signatory and editor of the "Program for the Democratization of the Republic" in 1961, and, in 1968, he was deported by the regime to São Tomé, one of Portugal's African colonies.In 1969, following the brief liberalization under the new prime minister Marcello Caetano, Soares returned from exile in Africa and participated as a member of the opposition in general elections for the National Assembly. Although harassed by the PIDE, he was courageous in attacking the government and its colonial policies in Africa. After the rigged election results were known, and no oppositionist deputy won a seat despite the Caetano "opening," Soares left for exile in France. From 1969 to 1974, he resided in France, consulted with other political exiles, and taught at a university. In 1973, at a meeting in West Germany, Soares participated in the (re)founding of the (Portuguese) Socialist Party.The exciting, unexpected news of the Revolution of 25 April 1974 reached Soares in France, and soon he was aboard a train bound for Lisbon, where he was to play a major role in the difficult period of revolutionary politics (1974-75). During a most critical phase, the "hot summer" of 1975, when a civil war seemed in the offing, Soares's efforts to steer Portugal away from a communist dictatorship and sustained civil strife were courageous and effective. He found allies in the moderate military and large sectors of the population. After the abortive leftist coup of 25 November 1975, Soares played an equally vital role in assisting the stabilization of a pluralist democracy.Prime minister on several occasions during the era of postrevolu-tionary adjustment (1976-85), Soares continued his role as the respected leader of the PS. Following 11 hectic years of the Lusitanian political hurly-burly, Soares was eager for a change and some rest. Prepared to give up leadership of the factious PS and become a senior statesman in the new Portugal, Mário Soares ran for the presidency of the republic. After serving twice as elected president of the republic, he established the Mário Soares Foundation, Lisbon, and was elected to the European Parliament.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Soares, Mário Alberto Nobre Lopes
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52 Social Democratic Party / Partido Social Democrático
(PSD)One of the two major political parties in democratic Portugal. It was established originally as the Popular Democratic Party / Partido Popular Democrático (PPD) in May 1974, following the Revolution of 25 April 1974 that overthrew the Estado Novo. The PPD had its roots in the "liberal wing" of the União Nacional, the single, legal party or movement allowed under the Estado Novo during the last phase of that regime, under Prime Minister Marcello Caetano. A number of future PPD leaders, such as Francisco Sá Carneiro and Francisco Balsemão, hoped to reform the Estado Novo from within, but soon became discouraged. After the 1974 Revolution, the PPD participated in two general elections (April 1975 and April 1976), which were crucial for the establishment and consolidation of democracy, and the party won sufficient votes to become the second largest political party after the Socialist Party (PS) in the number of seats held in the legislature, the Assembly of the Republic. The PPD voting results in those two elections were 26.4 percent and 24.4 percent, respectively.After the 1976 elections, the party changed its name from Partido Popular Democrático to Partido Social Democrático (PSD). As political opinion swung from the left to the center and center-right, and with the leadership of Francisco Sá Carneiro, the PSD gained greater popularity and strength, and from 1979 on, the party played an important role in government. After Sá Carneiro died in the air crash of December 1980, he was replaced as party chief and then prime minister by Francisco Balsemão, and then by Aníbal Cavaco Silva. As successors, these two leaders guided the PSD to a number of electoral victories, especially beginning in 1985. After 1987, the PSD held a majority of seats in parliament, a situation that lasted until 1995, when the Socialist Party (PS) won the election.The PSD's principal political program has featured the de-Marxi-fication of the 1976 Constitution and the economic system, a free-market economy with privatization of many state enterprises, and close ties with the European Economic Community (EEC) and subsequently the European Union (EU). After the PSD lost several general elections in 1995 and 1999, and following the withdrawal from office of former prime minister Cavaco Silva, a leadership succession crisis occurred in the party. The party leadership shifted from Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa to Manuel Durão Barroso, and, in 2004, Pedro Santana Lopes.During 2000 and 2001, as Portugal's economic situation worsened, the PS's popularity waned. In the December 2001 municipal elections, the PSD decisively defeated the PS and, as a result, Prime Minister António Guterres resigned. Parliamentary elections in March 2002 resulted in a Social Democratic victory, although its margin of victory over the PS was small (40 percent to 38 percent). Upon becoming premier in the spring of 2002, then, PSD leader Durão Barroso, in order to hold a slim majority of seats in the Assembly of the Republic, was obliged to govern in a coalition with the Popular Party (PP), formerly known as the Christian Democratic Party (CDS). Although the PSD had ousted the PS from office, the party confronted formidable economic and social problems. When Durão Barroso resigned to become president of the EU Commission, Pedro Santana Lopes became the PSD's leader, as prime minister in July 2004. Under Santana Lopes's leadership, the PSD lost the parliamentary elections of 2005 to the PS. Since then, the PSD has sought to regain its dominant position with the Portuguese electorate. It made some progress in doing so when its former leader, Cavaco Silva, was elected president of the Republic of 2006.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Social Democratic Party / Partido Social Democrático
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53 Computers
The brain has been compared to a digital computer because the neuron, like a switch or valve, either does or does not complete a circuit. But at that point the similarity ends. The switch in the digital computer is constant in its effect, and its effect is large in proportion to the total output of the machine. The effect produced by the neuron varies with its recovery from [the] refractory phase and with its metabolic state. The number of neurons involved in any action runs into millions so that the influence of any one is negligible.... Any cell in the system can be dispensed with.... The brain is an analogical machine, not digital. Analysis of the integrative activities will probably have to be in statistical terms. (Lashley, quoted in Beach, Hebb, Morgan & Nissen, 1960, p. 539)It is essential to realize that a computer is not a mere "number cruncher," or supercalculating arithmetic machine, although this is how computers are commonly regarded by people having no familiarity with artificial intelligence. Computers do not crunch numbers; they manipulate symbols.... Digital computers originally developed with mathematical problems in mind, are in fact general purpose symbol manipulating machines....The terms "computer" and "computation" are themselves unfortunate, in view of their misleading arithmetical connotations. The definition of artificial intelligence previously cited-"the study of intelligence as computation"-does not imply that intelligence is really counting. Intelligence may be defined as the ability creatively to manipulate symbols, or process information, given the requirements of the task in hand. (Boden, 1981, pp. 15, 16-17)The task is to get computers to explain things to themselves, to ask questions about their experiences so as to cause those explanations to be forthcoming, and to be creative in coming up with explanations that have not been previously available. (Schank, 1986, p. 19)In What Computers Can't Do, written in 1969 (2nd edition, 1972), the main objection to AI was the impossibility of using rules to select only those facts about the real world that were relevant in a given situation. The "Introduction" to the paperback edition of the book, published by Harper & Row in 1979, pointed out further that no one had the slightest idea how to represent the common sense understanding possessed even by a four-year-old. (Dreyfus & Dreyfus, 1986, p. 102)A popular myth says that the invention of the computer diminishes our sense of ourselves, because it shows that rational thought is not special to human beings, but can be carried on by a mere machine. It is a short stop from there to the conclusion that intelligence is mechanical, which many people find to be an affront to all that is most precious and singular about their humanness.In fact, the computer, early in its career, was not an instrument of the philistines, but a humanizing influence. It helped to revive an idea that had fallen into disrepute: the idea that the mind is real, that it has an inner structure and a complex organization, and can be understood in scientific terms. For some three decades, until the 1940s, American psychology had lain in the grip of the ice age of behaviorism, which was antimental through and through. During these years, extreme behaviorists banished the study of thought from their agenda. Mind and consciousness, thinking, imagining, planning, solving problems, were dismissed as worthless for anything except speculation. Only the external aspects of behavior, the surface manifestations, were grist for the scientist's mill, because only they could be observed and measured....It is one of the surprising gifts of the computer in the history of ideas that it played a part in giving back to psychology what it had lost, which was nothing less than the mind itself. In particular, there was a revival of interest in how the mind represents the world internally to itself, by means of knowledge structures such as ideas, symbols, images, and inner narratives, all of which had been consigned to the realm of mysticism. (Campbell, 1989, p. 10)[Our artifacts] only have meaning because we give it to them; their intentionality, like that of smoke signals and writing, is essentially borrowed, hence derivative. To put it bluntly: computers themselves don't mean anything by their tokens (any more than books do)-they only mean what we say they do. Genuine understanding, on the other hand, is intentional "in its own right" and not derivatively from something else. (Haugeland, 1981a, pp. 32-33)he debate over the possibility of computer thought will never be won or lost; it will simply cease to be of interest, like the previous debate over man as a clockwork mechanism. (Bolter, 1984, p. 190)t takes us a long time to emotionally digest a new idea. The computer is too big a step, and too recently made, for us to quickly recover our balance and gauge its potential. It's an enormous accelerator, perhaps the greatest one since the plow, twelve thousand years ago. As an intelligence amplifier, it speeds up everything-including itself-and it continually improves because its heart is information or, more plainly, ideas. We can no more calculate its consequences than Babbage could have foreseen antibiotics, the Pill, or space stations.Further, the effects of those ideas are rapidly compounding, because a computer design is itself just a set of ideas. As we get better at manipulating ideas by building ever better computers, we get better at building even better computers-it's an ever-escalating upward spiral. The early nineteenth century, when the computer's story began, is already so far back that it may as well be the Stone Age. (Rawlins, 1997, p. 19)According to weak AI, the principle value of the computer in the study of the mind is that it gives us a very powerful tool. For example, it enables us to formulate and test hypotheses in a more rigorous and precise fashion than before. But according to strong AI the computer is not merely a tool in the study of the mind; rather the appropriately programmed computer really is a mind in the sense that computers given the right programs can be literally said to understand and have other cognitive states. And according to strong AI, because the programmed computer has cognitive states, the programs are not mere tools that enable us to test psychological explanations; rather, the programs are themselves the explanations. (Searle, 1981b, p. 353)What makes people smarter than machines? They certainly are not quicker or more precise. Yet people are far better at perceiving objects in natural scenes and noting their relations, at understanding language and retrieving contextually appropriate information from memory, at making plans and carrying out contextually appropriate actions, and at a wide range of other natural cognitive tasks. People are also far better at learning to do these things more accurately and fluently through processing experience.What is the basis for these differences? One answer, perhaps the classic one we might expect from artificial intelligence, is "software." If we only had the right computer program, the argument goes, we might be able to capture the fluidity and adaptability of human information processing. Certainly this answer is partially correct. There have been great breakthroughs in our understanding of cognition as a result of the development of expressive high-level computer languages and powerful algorithms. However, we do not think that software is the whole story.In our view, people are smarter than today's computers because the brain employs a basic computational architecture that is more suited to deal with a central aspect of the natural information processing tasks that people are so good at.... hese tasks generally require the simultaneous consideration of many pieces of information or constraints. Each constraint may be imperfectly specified and ambiguous, yet each can play a potentially decisive role in determining the outcome of processing. (McClelland, Rumelhart & Hinton, 1986, pp. 3-4)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Computers
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