Postman Pat Time for a Treat

Postman Pat Time for a Treat

Author: John A. Cunliffe

Publisher:

Published: 2001-06-14

Total Pages: 96

ISBN-13: 9780340796689

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Four stories in one book for Postman Pat fans to enjoy Join Postman Pat for a breakfast, dinner, tea and supper in these short stories.


It's Tea Time, Postman Pat!

It's Tea Time, Postman Pat!

Author: Egmont Books, Limited

Publisher:

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 12

ISBN-13: 9781405223294

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Postman Pat is having an extra busy day. And as he delivers the post around Greendale, his friends invite him in for a cup of tea - but Pat can't stop, he must be somewhere every hour, until finally it really is tea-time


Delivery Time with Postman Pat

Delivery Time with Postman Pat

Author: Jude Exley

Publisher:

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 23

ISBN-13: 9781405217064

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Join Postman Pat and Jess as they make their deliveries! Postman Pat has lots of exciting letters to deliver today. Open the envelopes to see what's inside! There are six envelopes, with seven fantastic inserts: * The Greendale Gazette * fun stickers * secret map * photo * jigsaw puzzle * Greendale poster * Jess mask. Hours of fun for any Postman Pat fan!


Time and Causality

Time and Causality

Author: Marc J. Buehner

Publisher: Frontiers E-books

Published: 2014-08-06

Total Pages: 119

ISBN-13: 2889192520

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The problem of how humans and other intelligent systems construct causal representations from non-causal perceptual evidence has occupied scholars in cognitive science for many decades. Most contemporary approaches agree with David Hume that patterns of covariation between two events of interest are the critical input to the causal induction engine, irrespective of whether this induction is believed to be grounded in the formation of associations (Shanks & Dickinson, 1987), rule-based evaluation (White, 2004), appraisal of causal powers (Cheng, 1997), or construction of Bayesian Causal Networks (Pearl, 2000). Recent research, however, has repeatedly demonstrated that an exclusive focus on covariation while neglecting contiguity (another of Hume’s cues) results in ecologically invalid models of causal inference. Temporal spacing, order, variability, predictability, and patterning all have profound influence on the type of causal representation that is constructed. The influence of time upon causal representations could be seen as a bottom-up constraint (though current bottom-up models cannot account for the full spectrum of effects). However, causal representations in turn also constrain the perception of time: Put simply, two causally related events appear closer in subjective time than two (equidistant) unrelated events. This reversal of Hume’s conjecture, referred to as Causal Binding (Buehner & Humphreys, 2009) is a top-down constraint, and suggests that our representations of time and causality are mutually influencing one another. At present, the theoretical implications of this phenomenon are not yet fully understood. Some accounts link it exclusively to human motor planning (appealing to mechanisms of cross-modal temporal adaptation, or forward learning models of motor control). However, recent demonstrations of causal binding in the absence of human action, and analogous binding effects in the visual spatial domain, challenge such accounts in favour of Bayesian Evidence Integration. This Research Topic reviews and further explores the nature of the mutual influence between time and causality, how causal knowledge is constructed in the context of time, and how it in turn shapes and alters our perception of time. We draw together literatures from the perception and cognitive science, as well as experimental and theoretical papers. Contributions investigate the neural bases of binding and causal learning/perception, methodological advances, and functional implications of causal learning and perception in real time.