Professor: William Bechtel | Office Hours: Wed., 5:00-6:00 and by appointment |
Office: HSS 8076 | Email: cs200@mechanism.ucsd.edu |
Telephone: 822-4461 | Wiki: mechanism.ucsd.edu:8080/CS200 |
Scientific talks and papers are filled with diagrams: characterizations of a target phenomenon or hypothesis, sketches of an apparatus or experimental set-up, flow charts of steps in the procedure, graphs displaying data, "cartoons" of the mechanism proposed to explain the data, and so forth. One efficient way of reading a journal article is to read the abstract and then study each diagram in turn, only skimming the text or consulting it as needed to understand the diagrams. Diagrams play crucial roles not only in communicating to readers what already has been done, but in supporting the cognitive activities of scientists as they investigate phenomena, advance and evaluate explanations, and so forth.
This seminar will focus on the roles played by diagrams in science and especially in the cognitive activities of scientists. We are interested in how, why, and when scientists develop new diagrams or use existing ones. Thus, we will address such questions as: In what ways do diagrams convey scientific content? Do they convey different information, or do so differently, than propositional representations? How do diagrams figure in the reasoning activities of scientists as producers of their own research and as consumers of others' research. What considerations determine how researchers modify diagrams over time?
The speakers come from several cognitive science disciplines: psychology, computer science, and philosophy. Each has done extensive work on particular roles diagrams play in science.
Date |
Speaker |
Title of Talk |
Readings |
September 28 |
William Bechtel, UCSD |
1. Larkin, J. H., & Simon, H. A. (1987). Why a diagram is (sometimes) worth ten thousand words. Cognitive Science, 11, 65-99. |
|
October 5 |
Barbara Tversky, Stanford |
Visualizing Thought |
1. Tversky, B. (2011). Visualizing Thought. Topics in Cognitive Science, 3, 499-535. |
October 12 |
Laura Perini, Pomona |
Why Less is More: Reasoning with Diagrams in the Life Sciences |
1. Perini, L. (2012). Form and function: A semiotic analysi of figures in biology textbooks. In N. Anderson & M. R. Dietrich (Eds.), Form and function: A semiotic analysis of figures in biology textbooks (pp. 235-254). Dartmouth, NH: Dartmouth College Press. |
October 19 |
Mary Hegarty, UCSB |
Broadening the Study of Spatial Intelligence |
1. Hegarty, M. (2004). Mechanical reasoning by mental simulation. Trends in Cognitive Science, 8, 280-285. 2. Hegarty, M. (2011). The Cognitive Science of Visual-Spatial Displays: Implications for Design. Topics in Cognitive Science, 3, 446-474. |
October 26 |
Morana Alač, UCSD |
fMRI Brain Visuals as Diagrams |
1. Alač, M. (2011). Chapter 2: fMRI brain visuals as fields for interaction. Handling digital brains: A laboratory study of multimodal semiotic interaction in the age of computers. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press |
November 2 |
David Kirsh, UCSD |
Thinking with Illustrations |
1. Kirsh, D. (2010). Thinking with external representations. AI and Soc, 25, 441-454. |
November 9 |
Peter Cheng, Sussex |
Cognitive and conceptual benefits of re-codifying knowledge: Towards a representational epistemic science |
1. Cheng, P. C. H. (2011). Probably good diagrams for learning: Representational epistemic recodification of probability theory. Topics in Cognitive Science, 3, 475-498. |
November 16 |
Nancy Nersessian, Georgia Tech |
Diagrams in Creative Reasoning |
1. Nersessian, N. (2002). The cognitive basis of model-based reasoning in science. In P. Carruthers, S. Stich & M. Siegal (Eds.), The cognitive basis of science (pp. 133-153). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2. Dogan, F., & Nersessian, N. J. (2006). Design problem solving with conceptual diagrams. Proceedings of the 28th Annual Conference of Cognitive Science Society (pp. 600-6005). Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society. |
November 23 |
No Class: Thanksgiving |
|
|
November 30 |
Jim Griesemer, UCDavis |
A Theoretical Role of Visual Representation in the Formation of Biological Theories |
1. Griesemer, J. R. (2007). Tracking organic processes: Representations and research styles in cloassical embryology and genetics. In M. D. Laubichler & J. Maienschein (Eds.), From embryology to evo-devo: A history of developmental evolution (pp. 375-433). Cambridge, MA: MIT. |
December 7 |
Benjamin Sheredos, Dan Burnston, and William Bechtel, UCSD |
Diagrams for Reasoning about Mechanisms in Chronobiology |
1. Sheredos, B., Burnston, D. C, Abrahamsen, A., Bechtel, W. (forthcoming). Why do biologists use so many diagrams? Philosophy of Science. |
A discussion site has been established for this course: mechanism.ucsd.edu:8080/CS200/. The pages are viewable by everyone. To edit or comment on these pages, you must get an account. Email me at cs200@mechanism.ucsd.edu to request an account.
Students are required to:
This course should be taken for S/U grade only. If your department requires a letter grade, or you have some other reason why you need a letter grade, please let me know.