Monday, August 23, 2021

On the relation of frame and schema

 

On the relation of frame and schema

 

Our experience of reality is not perfect.  We may have misperceptions of reality.  It’s really important to understand we’re not perceiving reality, Our brains unconsciously bend our perception of reality to meet our desires or expectations and compensate our limits as humanbeings. And they fill in gaps using our past experiences.  Illusions are caused by frames in our minds, either physiological or psychological. 

 

Frames and schemata are found to be basic elements in the operation of our brains.  There are many texts that explain frames and schemata.  When I studied them I noticed a better understanding may easily be achieved if the subject is studied with the view of a computer system architecture.  For example in their article “Schemas and Frames”,  Michael Lee Wood, Dustin S. Stoltz, Justin Van Ness, and Marshall A. Taylor define frame as:

 

Frames are situational assemblages of material objects (including bodies and settings) that evoke certain responses from individuals, in part by activating particular sets of schemas.[1]

 

In computer architecture terms:

1-       Frame is a collection of objects that form a condition

2-       Frame is a trigger

3-      Frame triggers (prepares a partition) a context and (deploys an object) a schema in it when the frame’s condition is fulfilled

                                  

A frame may trigger an identity/an object.  For example a teacher frame may deploy a teacher object which is semantically inherited from a person object and may have related instantiation as “my teachers” etc.

 

For example an interaction of (person, bends his head, your teacher) ---> return his salute.

1-       If a person bends his head when looking at you

2-       If you know that person is your teacher

3-       You return his salute

May cause events very roughly:

1-        (an event frame is triggered)--->respond schema

2-       (respond schema:what action) ===> visualFrame

3-       visualFrame --->  personOBJ                  

4-       (personOBJ ===> whoFrame )

5-       (whoFrame ===> myteacherOBJ )

6-       visualFrame ===>  doesWhatOBJ

7-       doesWhatOBJ --->behaviourOBJ

8-       behaviourOBJ:giveSaluteMETHOD

 

 

               

Here visualFrame triggers both the personOBJ and the doesWhatOBJ.         In return both of these objects call frames to find who and what answers.  This requires a LOOP behaviour from the frames limited with success or failure.

 

How is a frame executed?

A frame becomes part of a loop action which checks its condition repeatedly.  When a frame is deployed the frame condition is iteratively checked till

1-       it is fulfilled with success

2-       it fails till the end of available data

3-       a certain time expires

4-       a higher priority frame or task has to be deployed.  This will either cancel the current frame or causes it to sleep – a wait condition.

 

A frame can not work more than once in the same moment. 

1-      Rabbit-duck illusion [2]




2-      You can see two different animals but you cannot see both of them concurrently

3-      If you practice you may see both as half animals of a picture but not completely concurrently.

 

More than one frame may work at the same time.

                1-Driving a car uses many frames that are called by automatic processes. 

                2-You may listen to music at the same time when suddenly your visualFrame causes you to react.

 

There are builtin frames that are deployed automatically (visual frames) and there are learned frames (driving related) that are deployed manually or automatically(walking, eating).

 

Vigilance/precaution etc. are frames that are deployed in relevant contexts.  These frames prepare a context or prepare a partition of objects that may be triggered according to the character of emergency.  A context provides the frames related to objects/methods in it by a continuously iterated loop.

 

“Frames are explicitly cognitive objects that individual actors possess; they are “‘schemata of interpretation’

that enable individuals ‘to locate, perceive, identify, and label’ occurrences within their life space

and “persistent patterns of cognition, interpretation, and presentation . . . by which symbol-handlers routinely organize discourse” [3]

 

Frames themselves are objects hence they are interpretetive schemas.  But when we say frame most likely we mention an instance of it.  The frame object is named as “ models of frames” and the related frames are instances of it.  Frames are interpretative schemata.  Frames and schemata are instances of objects, so they both have attributes and methods.  But frames have much more fixed and dedicated character.  For example they have only one collection which defines their condition where as an object may have many collections in it. And a schema may have many related collections in it.

 

Frames shall reside in a different location than schemata or normal objects.  They are continuously checked in a loop where as a schema is deployed once except in the case of recursion.  This leads to the possibility that frames may be deployed/located in somewhere such as Thalamus whereas schemata may reside in outer cortex???.  But it is certain that they are deployed/controlled by different functioning parts of the brain.  This remains to be inspected by objective tests.

 

REFERENCES:

[1] Michael Lee Wood, Dustin S. Stoltz, Justin Van Ness, and Marshall A. Taylor, “Schemas and Frames”,

Sociological Theory 2018, Vol. 36(3) 244–261 © American Sociological Association

[2] rabbit-duck illusion, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbit%E2%80%93duck_illusion

[3] Snow, David A., E. Burke Rochford, Steven K. Worden, and Robert D. Benford. “Frame Alignment

Processes, Micromobilization, and Movement Participation.” 1986 American Sociological Review 51(4):464-81.