George A. Miller

Cognitive Science American 1920 – 2012 106 quotes

A pioneering cognitive psychologist known for his seminal paper 'The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two' on short-term memory capacity.

Quotes by George A. Miller

My problem is that I have been persecuted by an integer. For seven years this number has followed me around, has intruded in my most private data, and has assaulted me from the pages of our most public journals. This number, 7 ± 2, a quantity I can no longer believe, has appeared in my life with such a regularity that I have begun to suspect either a personal vendetta or a cosmic coincidence.

The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing Information 1956

The capacity of short-term memory is about seven items.

The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing Information 1956

Chunking is a recoding of information into larger, more meaningful units.

The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing Information 1956

The most important thing to remember about 'The Magical Number Seven' is that it's not about seven items, it's about seven chunks.

Interview 1989

Language is not a collection of words and rules, but a system for expressing and understanding thoughts.

Plans and the Structure of Behavior 1960

The plan is the unit of analysis for understanding behavior.

Plans and the Structure of Behavior 1960

A TOTE unit (Test-Operate-Test-Exit) is a basic feedback loop in cognitive processes.

Plans and the Structure of Behavior 1960

Cognitive psychology is the scientific study of mind and mental processes.

Psychology: The Science of Mental Life 1967

The computer metaphor for the mind has been incredibly productive.

Interview 1979

Psychology, after a long detour through behaviorism, has returned to its senses.

Interview 1979

The goal of cognitive science is to understand the nature of intelligence.

Cognitive Science: A New Discipline 1979

Words are not things, but symbols for things.

The Science of Words 1991

The mental lexicon is a vast and intricate network of words and their meanings.

The Science of Words 1991

Meaning is not in words, but in the minds of those who use them.

The Science of Words 1991

The human mind is a symbol-processing system.

Plans and the Structure of Behavior 1960

We are not passive recipients of information; we actively construct our understanding of the world.

Psychology: The Science of Mental Life 1967

The study of language is central to the study of mind.

The Science of Words 1991

Psychology is the science of what we know and how we know it.

Psychology: The Science of Mental Life 1967

The brain is not a general-purpose computer, but a collection of specialized modules.

Speech 1980

The cognitive revolution was a return to the study of mental processes.

Interview 1979