On the Foundations of the Brussels Operational-Realistic Approach to Cognition

The scientific community is becoming more and more interested in the research that applies the mathematical formalism of quantum theory to model human decision-making. In this paper, we provide the theoretical foundations of the quantum approach to cognition that we developed in Brussels. These foun...

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Main Authors: Diederik eAerts, Massimiliano eSassoli de Bianchi, Sandro eSozzo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Physics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphy.2016.00017/full
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spelling doaj-81dcd0685b7e45b4b2dbac9f566479792020-11-25T01:06:07ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physics2296-424X2016-05-01410.3389/fphy.2016.00017189678On the Foundations of the Brussels Operational-Realistic Approach to CognitionDiederik eAerts0Massimiliano eSassoli de Bianchi1Sandro eSozzo2Free University of Brussels (VUB)Laboratorio di Autoricerca di BaseUniversity of LeicesterThe scientific community is becoming more and more interested in the research that applies the mathematical formalism of quantum theory to model human decision-making. In this paper, we provide the theoretical foundations of the quantum approach to cognition that we developed in Brussels. These foundations rest on the results of two decade studies on the axiomatic and operational-realistic approaches to the foundations of quantum physics. The deep analogies between the foundations of physics and cognition lead us to investigate the validity of quantum theory as a general and unitary framework for cognitive processes, and the empirical success of the Hilbert space models derived by such investigation provides a strong theoretical confirmation of this validity. However, two situations in the cognitive realm, `question order effects' and `response replicability', indicate that even the Hilbert space framework could be insufficient to reproduce the collected data. This does not mean that the mentioned operational-realistic approach would be incorrect, but simply that a larger class of measurements would be in force in human cognition, so that an extended quantum formalism may be needed to deal with all of them. As we will explain, the recently derived `extended Bloch representation' of quantum theory (and the associated `general tension-reduction' model) precisely provides such extended formalism, while remaining within the same unitary interpretative framework.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphy.2016.00017/fullhuman cognitionCognitive Modelingquantum structuresFoundations of quantum theoryTension-reduction model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diederik eAerts
Massimiliano eSassoli de Bianchi
Sandro eSozzo
spellingShingle Diederik eAerts
Massimiliano eSassoli de Bianchi
Sandro eSozzo
On the Foundations of the Brussels Operational-Realistic Approach to Cognition
Frontiers in Physics
human cognition
Cognitive Modeling
quantum structures
Foundations of quantum theory
Tension-reduction model
author_facet Diederik eAerts
Massimiliano eSassoli de Bianchi
Sandro eSozzo
author_sort Diederik eAerts
title On the Foundations of the Brussels Operational-Realistic Approach to Cognition
title_short On the Foundations of the Brussels Operational-Realistic Approach to Cognition
title_full On the Foundations of the Brussels Operational-Realistic Approach to Cognition
title_fullStr On the Foundations of the Brussels Operational-Realistic Approach to Cognition
title_full_unstemmed On the Foundations of the Brussels Operational-Realistic Approach to Cognition
title_sort on the foundations of the brussels operational-realistic approach to cognition
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physics
issn 2296-424X
publishDate 2016-05-01
description The scientific community is becoming more and more interested in the research that applies the mathematical formalism of quantum theory to model human decision-making. In this paper, we provide the theoretical foundations of the quantum approach to cognition that we developed in Brussels. These foundations rest on the results of two decade studies on the axiomatic and operational-realistic approaches to the foundations of quantum physics. The deep analogies between the foundations of physics and cognition lead us to investigate the validity of quantum theory as a general and unitary framework for cognitive processes, and the empirical success of the Hilbert space models derived by such investigation provides a strong theoretical confirmation of this validity. However, two situations in the cognitive realm, `question order effects' and `response replicability', indicate that even the Hilbert space framework could be insufficient to reproduce the collected data. This does not mean that the mentioned operational-realistic approach would be incorrect, but simply that a larger class of measurements would be in force in human cognition, so that an extended quantum formalism may be needed to deal with all of them. As we will explain, the recently derived `extended Bloch representation' of quantum theory (and the associated `general tension-reduction' model) precisely provides such extended formalism, while remaining within the same unitary interpretative framework.
topic human cognition
Cognitive Modeling
quantum structures
Foundations of quantum theory
Tension-reduction model
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphy.2016.00017/full
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AT massimilianoesassolidebianchi onthefoundationsofthebrusselsoperationalrealisticapproachtocognition
AT sandroesozzo onthefoundationsofthebrusselsoperationalrealisticapproachtocognition
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