1. Introduction
Knowledge is divided into two kinds in the
definition of philosophy: prior knowledge and experience knowledge. Prior
knowledge refers to knowledge that naturally exists and does not depend on
objective experience. Experience knowledge refers to the knowledge that people
can feel their existence. In short, it is through feeling to feel everything in
the world [
1] The dispute between empiricism
and transcendentalism has been long overdue. It can be traced back to the era
of Plato. Plato believes that knowledge and feeling are two different things.
The philosopher Protagoras believes that man is the yardstick of everything in
the world. People’s feelings about things come from the appearance of things to
people [
2]. After the rise of modern physics,
the philosophical community further developed discussions on methodological
issues. Aristotle sent a distinction between analytical methods and
comprehensive methods. Galileo’s analysis methods and synthesis methods are
used to explain and propose hypotheses. Newton distinguishes from the
perspective of cause and effect, and thus shifts to the direction of empiricism
[
3]. Since then, empirical methods include
analysis. In Locke’s time, he put forward a harsh criticism on the innate idea,
which caused a far-reaching impact. At the same time, with the development of
scientific practice, empirical theory has achieved great success. Many modern
philosophers oppose Plato’s a priori theory. This also makes the antithetical
empiricism more and more important in the history of western philosophy [
4].
Cognitive neuroscience is developed at the cross
level of cognitive psychology, philosophy, artificial intelligence, artificial
neural network, biology, physics, mathematics and other disciplines. It aims to
elucidate the neurological mechanisms of mental history and how the operation
of the brain produces psychological or cognitive functions, that is, to study
how the brain creates spirit [
5,
6]. Common
methods include psychophysics, electrophysiology, behavioral genetics,
functional neuroimaging, and cognitive genetics. The main purpose is to explore
how humans use neural molecules, brain cells, brain tissue regions, and whole
brains to realize the neural mechanisms of human advanced mental activities, such
as consciousness, language, memory, feeling, thinking, association, and
imagination. At present, the research topics mainly include attention,
consciousness, decision-making, learning, memory, etc. [
7].
2. Experimental Part
Humans have the same or a similar perception of the
objective world. Therefore, it is feasible to give the subject a certain
concept description through experiments. From the Internet and CD, 120 kinds of
sounds in daily life were selected. Adobe Audition CS6 software was used to intercept
1000 ms to maintain its identifiability. Then, the sound quality lossless
normalization process is performed. The 30 participants who participated in the
pre-experiment were auditioned, one by one, to record the concept of sound.
Based on familiarity with the sound, scores were divided into five levels (5
points: very familiar, four points: relatively familiar, three points: somewhat
familiar, two points: unfamiliar, one point: completely unfamiliar). The 80
voices with the highest identification (score) were counted for the main
experiment, including 12 animal calls.
The experiment includes two conditions: The
experimental group voice prompts: each sound is in a group of “blurry mixing,
fuzzy mixing, voice prompts, fuzzy mixing” order, and 80 kinds of sounds are
presented randomly. Before each group of sounds is presented, a black “+” shape
is presented in the center of the light grey screen for 500 ms, followed by 1000
ms of sound stimulation. Each segment of sound is randomly spaced at intervals
of 1500 to 2000 ms. The experiment was divided into 80 groups. After the
presentation of the 16th, 32nd, 48th, and 60th groups of voices, the
participants can take a short break. The control group text prompts: each sound
is randomly and sequentially presented in the order of “fuzzy mixing, fuzzy
mixing, text prompting, and fuzzy mixing”. In the following, the entirety of
the first time presented fuzzy sound under both conditions is simply referred
to as “1 blur”. By analogy, they are called “2 blurs”, “3 prompts”, and “4
blurs”.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Behavioral Results
The main experiment of 19 groups and the control
experiment of 9 groups were performed. The behavioral results of auditory
cognition experiments were recorded under the conditions of the two sensory
channels.
The reaction
time results showed that the average response time of the experimental group
was 21.92 ms lower than that of the control group. There
was no significant difference between groups. The correct rate results
showed that the correct rate of the experimental group was slightly higher than
that of the control group by 0.98 percentage points. There was no significant
difference between groups.
It was found that the average response time of the
same sensory channel (auditory) was 21.92 ms faster than that of the control
group. Error rates under voice and text prompts were 5.88% and 6.86%,
respectively, and both were less than 10%. Therefore, it is in line with the
task requirements of the subjects. The specific results are shown in
Table 1. There was no difference between groups
in the two groups. The miss ratio in the experimental group was nine percentage
points smaller than that in the control group. After the prompt, the hit rate
of the subjects who chose the new different stimulus was significantly higher
than when they were not prompted (F(1, 27) = 59.67,
p < 0.001).
3.2. ERP Results
In order to eliminate the effects of new and
different stimuli and differences in physical characteristics, two blur
(pre-prompt) and four blur (post-prompt) waveforms were analyzed. According to
the two blur (pre-prompt) and four blur (post-prompt) electrodes of the
experimental group and the control group at the electrodes of F3, FZ, F4, C3,
CZ, C4, P3, PZ, and P4, the fuzzy evoked a relatively uniform waveform. This is
similar to P1, N1, P2, N2 and other components. On the whole, the conceptual
expectation effect (conceptual intervention) induces a positive shift in the
ERP waveform. The difference wave between 4 blur and 2 blur is a positive wave
with a large span.
0~200 ms after stimulation: The experimental and
control data for the P1, N1 components of the brain regions corresponding to
this time window were compared with two blurs (pre-prompt) and four blurs (post-prompt). The waveform has a high degree of
overlap in the forehead area and the center area and is slightly separated in
the top area. Among them, the peak value of the N1 component of the
experimental group data was corrected in the right hemisphere, and the control
group was more negative. The results of ANOVA repeated measurement analysis are
shown in
Table 2 and
Table 3. Two blur/four
blur has no significant main effect. Electrode locations (between the anterior
and middle regions of the brain) were not significantly different between the
hemispheres of the brain (between the left, middle and right regions of the
brain). There is no interaction between two blur/four blur and the brain’s
electrode position and hemisphere. There is a significant interaction between
electrode location and hemisphere location. Reaction type, hemispherical site,
and electrode position have no obvious interaction effect. The data in the
control group were not significant. This shows that there is a small difference
in early auditory processing before and after the voice prompts and text
prompts.
200~400 ms after stimulation: The experimental group data and the control group data were compared in the P2, N2 components of the brain area of the time window, two blurs (pre-prompt) and four blurs (post-prompt). There is a more correct offset for the waveform after the prompt. Differences in experimental data were more significant than those in the control group. The results of ANOVA repeated measurement analysis are shown in
Table 4 and
Table 5. The two blur/four blur of the experimental group has a significant main effect. There was no significant difference between the anterior and middle apical regions of the brain in the electrode position. The hemispherical location of the brain (between the left, middle and right regions of the brain) is significantly different two blur/four blur and the brain’s electrode position and hemisphere have no interaction effect. There is no significant interaction between the electrode position and the hemisphere. In the control data, only two blur and four blur have significant main effects.
4. Conclusions
The problem of philosophical knowledge is combined with the cognitive neuron-brain experiment. Through two sets of ERP experiments, the participants were tested for sound recognition in the experimental group “fuzzy mixing, fuzzy mixing, voice prompts, fuzzy mixing “and the control group “fuzzy mixing, fuzzy mixing, text prompting, fuzzy mixing”. The following conclusions are drawn. From the results of behavioral studies, subjects in the experimental group were all the same sensory channels. The reaction time is faster. The hit rate of the second choice was significantly higher than that of the unprompted group. The subjects changed from auditory perception to conceptual change. From the data of electroencephalogram, sound materials induce early auditory stimulus processing components. The waveform is close to the same in the 0~200 ms time period. There are significant differences in the 200~400 ms time period. It reflects the brain’s advanced cognitive processing of sound stimulation. Therefore, it has been verified temporally that the concept involves later than sensory occurrence. It verifies from time that “the relationship” exists.