Sarah Robins’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Why have “revolutionary” tools found purchase in memory science?
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December 2023

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31 Reads

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4 Citations

Philosophy and the Mind Sciences

David Colaço

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Sarah Robins

The study of the neural basis of memory has advanced over the past decade. A key contributor to this memory “renaissance” has been new tools. On its face, this matches what might be described as a neuroscientific revolution stemming from the development of tools, where this revolution is largely independent of theory. In this paper, we challenge this tool revolution account by focusing on a problem that arises in applying it to this “renaissance”: it is centered around memory, but the tools were not developed for solving problems in memory science. To resolve this problem, we introduce an account that distinguishes tool development and tool uptake, and we argue that while theoretical considerations may not inform development, they do inform uptake. Acknowledging the distance between these stages of tool use draws our attention to the questions of why and how tool uptake occurs in the domains that it does.

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Citations (1)


... If the Mere Causal Argument is ultimately supported by the manifest progress that has been and can be made, then it is fair for me to point out that our knowledge of the neural basis of memory has also advanced via investigating this system in causal terms. For just one example, tools like optogenetics have advanced our ability to study mnemonic mechanisms of encoding, storage, and retrieval, though how we ought to incorporate these insights into our explanations of memory remains up for debate (Colaço and Robins 2023). More generally, it seems difficult for one to deny that our causal knowledge of conventional memory has increased through pursuit of these systems in causal terms. ...

Reference:

On Consistently Assessing Alleged Mnemonic Systems (or, why isn’t Immune Memory “really” Memory?)
Why have “revolutionary” tools found purchase in memory science?

Philosophy and the Mind Sciences