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Allan M. Collins | |
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Born | (1937-09-24)September 24, 1937 (age 87) |
Education | University of Michigan (B.A., M.A., Ph.D.) |
Occupation(s) | Cognitive scientist, Professor Emeritus of Learning Sciences |
Employer | Northwestern University |
Known for | Research on semantic memory, artificial intelligence, intelligent tutoring systems, cognitive apprenticeship |
Notable work | SCHOLAR CAI, WHY intelligent tutoring system |
Title | Professor Emeritus of Learning Sciences |
Awards | John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship (1974),Sloan Fellowship |
Allan M. Collins is an Americancognitive scientist, Professor Emeritus ofLearning Sciences atNorthwestern University's School of Education and Social Policy. His research is recognized as having broad impact on the fields ofcognitive psychology,artificial intelligence, and education.
Collins is most well known in psychology for his foundational research on humansemantic memory and cognition. Collins and colleagues, most notably M.R. Quillian andElizabeth Loftus, developed the position that semantic knowledge is represented in stored category representations, linked together in a taxonomically organized processing hierarchy (seesemantic networks). Support for their models came from a classic series of reaction-time experiments on human question answering.[1][2][3]
Inartificial intelligence, Collins is recognized for work onintelligent tutoring systems andplausible reasoning. With collaboratorJaime Carbonell, Collins produced the first documented example of an intelligent tutor system called SCHOLAR CAI (computer-assisted instruction).[4] Knowledge in SCHOLAR was structured analogously to the then theorized organization of human semantic memory as to afford a variety of meaningful interactions with the system. Collins' extensive research program pioneered discourse analysis methods to study the strategies human tutors use to adapt their teaching to learners. In addition, Collins studied and developed a formal theory characterizing the variety of plausible inferences people use to ask questions about which their knowledge is incomplete. Importantly, Collins developed methods to embed lessons learned from such research into the SCHOLAR system, improving system usability and effectiveness. Subsequently, Collins developed WHY, an intelligent tutoring system that used theSocratic method for tutoring causal knowledge and reasoning. In conjunction with this project he developed a formal computational theory of Socratic tutoring, derived from analyses of inquiry teaching dialogues.
As a cognitive scientist and foundational member of the field of thelearning sciences, Collins has influenced several strands of educational research and development. Building upon his work on intelligent tutoring systems, he has conducted numerous projects investigating the use of technology in schools and developingeducational technologies for assessing and improving student learning. Collins has gradually shifted towards thesituated cognition view of knowledge being embedded in the activity, context, and culture in which it is developed and used. In response to conventional practices that often ignore the influence of culture and activity, Collins and colleagues have developed and studiedcognitive apprenticeship as an effective alternative educational practice. In addition, Collins was among the first to advocate for and outlinedesign-based research methodologies in education.
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