*INTRO TO CSGnet*

INTRODUCTION TO THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP NETWORK (CSGnet)
             AND TO THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP
             Prepared by Dag Forssell 921118.

This introduction provides information about:

   Our subject: Perceptual Control Theory
   The evolution of the control paradigm
   Demonstrating the Phenomenon of Control
   The purpose of CSGnet
   CSGnet participants
   Asking questions
   The Control Systems Group
   Subscribing to CSGnet
   How to obtain text and program files
   Literature references

OUR SUBJECT: PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY

Here are two introductions by Bill and Mary Powers:

  There have been two paradigms in the behavioral sciences since
  the 1600's. One was the idea that events impinging on
  organisms make them behave as they do. The other, which was
  developed in the 1930's, is PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY (PCT).
  Perceptual Control Theory explains how organisms control what
  happens to them. This means all organisms from the amoeba to
  humankind. It explains why one organism can't control another
  without physical violence. It explains why people deprived of
  any major part of their ability to control soon become
  dysfunctional, lose interest in life, pine away and die. It
  explains what a goal is, how goals relate to action, how
  action affects perceptions and how perceptions define the
  reality in which we live and move and have our being.
  Perceptual Control Theory is the first scientific theory that
  can handle all these phenomena within a single, testable
  concept of how living systems work.

                      William T. Powers, November 3, 1991

  PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY

  While the existence of control mechanisms and processes (such
  as feedback) in living systems is generally recognized, the
  implications of control organization go far beyond what is
  generally accepted. We believe that a fundamental
  characteristic of organisms is their ability to control; that
  they are, in fact, living control systems. To distinguish this
  approach from others using some version of control theory but
  forcing it to fit conventional approaches, we call ours
  Perceptual Control Theory, or PCT.

  PCT requires a major shift in thinking from the traditional
  approach: that what is controlled is not behavior, but
  perception. Modelling behavior as a dependent variable, as a
  response to stimuli, provides no explanation for the
  phenomenon of achieving consistent ends through varying means,
  and requires an extensive use of statistics to achieve modest
  (to the point of meaningless) correlations. Attempts to model
  behavior as planned and computed output can be demonstrated to
  require levels of precise calculation that are unobtainable in
  a physical system, and impossible in a real environment that
  is changing from one moment to the next. The PCT model views
  behavior as the means by which a perceived state of affairs is
  brought to and maintained at a reference state. This approach
  provides a physically plausible explanation for the
  consistency of outcomes and the variability of means.

  The PCT model has been used to simulate phenomena as diverse
  as bacterial chemotaxis, tracking a target, and behavior in
  crowds. In its elaborated form, a hierarchy of perceptual
  control systems (HPCT), it has lent itself to a computer
  simulation of tracking, including learning to track, and to
  new approaches to education, management, and psychotherapy.

  Control systems are not new in the life sciences. However,
  numerous misapprehensions exist, passed down from what was
  learned about control theory by non-engineers 40 or 50 years
  ago without further reference to newer developments or
  correction of initial misunderstandings. References in the
  literature to the desirability of positive feedback and the
  assertion that systems with feedback are slower than S-R
  systems are simply false, and concerns about stability are
  unfounded.

  The primary barrier to the adoption of PCT concepts is the
  belief - or hope - that control theory can simply be absorbed
  into the mainstream life sciences without disturbing the
  status quo. It is very hard to believe that one's training and
  life work, and that of one's mentors, and their mentors, must
  be fundamentally revised. Therefore, PCT appeals to those who
  feel some dissatisfaction with the status quo, or who are
  attracted to the idea of a generative model with broad
  application throughout the life sciences (plus AI and
  robotics). There are very few people working in PCT research.
  Much of its promise is still simply promise, and it meets
  resistance from all sides. It is frustrating but also
  tremendously exciting to be a part of the group who believe
  that they are participating in the birth of a true science of
  life.
                        Mary Powers, November 1992

THE EVOLUTION OF THE CONTROL PARADIGM

The PCT paradigm originates in 1927, when an engineer named
Harold Black invented the negative feedback amplifier, which is
a control device. This invention led to the development of
purposeful machines. Purposeful machines have built-in intent to
achieve consistent ends by variable means under changing
conditions.

The discovery and formalization of the phenomenon of control is
the first alternative to the cause-effect perspective ever
proposed in any science.

The first discussion of purposeful machines and people came in
1943 in a paper called: Behavior, Purpose and Teleology by
Rosenblueth, Wiener and Bigelow. This paper also argued that
purpose belongs in science as a real phenomenon in the present.
Purpose does not mean that somehow the future influences the
present.

The first specific suggestion on how to use the concept of
control to understand people came in 1957 in a paper entitled:
A General Feedback Theory of Human Behavior by McFarland, Powers
and Clark.

In 1973 William T. (Bill) Powers published a seminal book called
"Behavior: the Control of Perception," which still is the major
reference for PCT. See literature below.

This book spells out a complete model of how the human brain and
nervous system works like a living perceptual control system.
Our brain can be viewed as a system that controls its own
perceptions. This view suggests explanations for many previously
mysterious aspects of how people interact with their world.

Perceptual Control Theory has been accepted by independently
thinking psychologists, scientists and other interested people.
The result is that an association has been formed (the Control
System Group), several books published, this CSGnet set up and
that at latest count 16 professors are teaching PCT in American
universities today.

DEMONSTRATING THE PHENOMENON OF CONTROL

The phenomenon of control is largely unrecognized in science
today. It is not well understood in important aspects even by
many control engineers. Yet the phenomenon of control, when it
is recognized and understood, provides a powerful enhancement to
scientific perspectives.

It is essential to recognize that this phenomenon exists and
deserves an explanation before any of the discourse on CSGnet
will make sense.

Please download the introductory demonstration dem1a.exe, which
is an interactive program and/or rubberbd.txt, which is a text
telling you how to demonstrate the phenomenon to yourself and a
friend using only two rubber bands.

THE PURPOSE OF CSGnet:

CSGnet provides a forum for development, use and testing of PCT.

CSGnet PARTICIPANTS

Many interests and backgrounds are represented here. Psychology,
Sociology, Linguistics, Artificial Intelligence, Robotics,
Social Work, Neurology, Modeling and Testing. All are
represented and discussed. As of December 1992 there were
over 130 individuals from 18 countries subscribed to CSGnet.

ASKING QUESTIONS

Please introduce yourself with a statement of your professional
interests and background. It will help someone answer if you
spell out which demonstrations, introductory papers and
references you have taken the time to digest.

THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP

The CSG is an organization of people in the behavioral, social,
and life sciences who see the potential in PCT for increased
understanding in their own fields and for the unification of
diverse and fragmented specialties.

Annual dues are $45 for full members and $5 for students
(subsidized).

An annual meeting is held in Durango, Colorado, on the campus of
Fort Lewis College. In 1993 it will begin in the evening of
Wednesday, July 28, and end Sunday morning, Aug, 1. There will
be 7 plenary meetings (mornings and evenings), with afternoons,
mealtimes, and late night free for further discussion or
recreation. Full details will be available on the net or by mail
after April 1, 1993.

Net subscribers find it useful to have thematic collections of
some of the network discussions, and it enables non-net members
to keep up with them. Threads from this net are published on a
quarterly basis in a booklet called the Closed Loop. These
booklets are distributed to members and are available
separately. A complimentary copy of Closed Loop will be sent
upon request. Back issues are available: Volume 1 (4 issues) is
$12. Single issues of Volume 2, beginning with Jan. 1992, are $6
each.

For membership information and back issues of Closed Loop,
write: CSG, c/o Mary Powers, 73 Ridge Place CR 510, Durango, CO
81301-8136.

SUBSCRIBING TO CSGnet

When you subscribe to CSGnet, you get this message,
CSGINTRO.DOC. But you may have received it from a friend who
printed it, seen it on a demodisk, or seen it on Usenet. To
subscribe, send a message as follows: (Internet address followed
by two message commands, one per line)

  LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
  Subscribe CSG-L Lastname, Firstname, Affiliation, City, State.
  help

(Lastname, Firstname, etc is optional commentary, but helpful).
("help" requests a list of most commonly used commands).
(The Bitnet address is: LISTSERV@UIUCVMD).
(This server is not sensitive to upper or lower case letters).

CSGnet can also be accessed via Usenet (NetNews) where it is
listed as the newsgroup bit.listserv.csg-l.

For more information about accessing CSGnet, contact Gary Cziko,
the network manager, at G-CZIKO@UIUC.EDU

HOW TO OBTAIN TEXT AND PROGRAM FILES

A number of ASCII documents and binary computer programs are
available on a fileserver maintained by Bill Silvert. It is
possible to download all these files via e-mail. If you are on
internet, it is easiest to obtain binary program files via
anonymous FTP. If you are on MCI mail, you have read about how
you can transfer binary files with Kermit or Zmodem protocols.
(Type help at the MCI mail prompt for directions). But the
server cannot send binary files over the internet mail network,
so download uue.scr first, then request the binary files
uuencoded as ASCII files. The Internet address for the server is
BIOME.BIO.NS.CA. CSGnet files are kept in the subdirectory
pub/csg.

To get basic information and a current listing of available
documents, send a message as follows: (Internet)

Commands: help
            ftp
            get csg/Index
            end

"help" requests commands and explanations.
"ftp" asks details on anonymous FTP for internet.
"get csg/Index" requests the Index for the csg subdirectory.

Pay attention to letter case for commands! DOS is not dos.

As part of the index (of the csg directory), you may be looking
at:

programs/msdos:
dem1a.exe 128437 Bill Power's demonstr of perceptual control
dem2a.exe 123649 Bill Power's modelling of control

documents/forssell:
uud.scr 53406 ASCII Compile uud.exe w DOS debug Dir @ end.

If you want dem1a.exe (uuencoded) to get a "live" demonstration
of the phenomenon of control, and the ASCII file uud.scr with
directions at the end on how to use DOS debug to compile uud.exe
to decode it, send the following message commands:

uue csg/programs/msdos/dem1a.exe
get csg/programs/forssell/uud.scr

The uuencoded dem1a.exe will be sent in four parts. Remove
headers and use an editor to make it into one file (starting
with table and ending with end) before you use uud.exe to
restore the file. dem1a.exe is a self-extracting archive file.
Put it in it's own directory before you execute it. You get
complete documentation and a running program.

LITERATURE REFERENCES

For a complete list of CSG-related publications, get the file
biblio.pct from the fileserver as described above. Here are some
selected books and papers on Perceptual Control Theory (entries preceded by
an asterisk are available from The Control Systems Group, 460 Black Lick
Road, Gravel Switch, KY 40328).

Powers, William T. (1973). _Behavior: The control of
perception_. Hawthorne, NY: Aldine DeGruyter.
     The basic text.

*Robertson, Richard J. and Powers, William T. (Eds.). (1990).
_Introduction to modern psychology: The control theory view_.
Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Book. ($25 postpaid)
     College-level text.

*Powers, William T. (1989). _Living control systems: Selected
papers_. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($16.50 postpaid)
     Previously published papers, 1960-1988.

*Powers, William T. (1992). _Living control systems II: Selected
papers_. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($22 postpaid)
     Previously unpublished papers, 1959-1990.

*Marken, Richard S. (1992). _Mind readings: Experimental studies
of purpose_. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($18 postpaid)
     Research papers exploring control.

Marken, Richard S. (Ed.). (1990). Purposeful Behavior: The
control theory approach. _American Behavioral Scientist_,
_34_(1). (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications)
     11 articles on control theory.

Runkel, Philip J. (1990). _Casting nets and testing specimens_.
New York: Praeger.
     When statistics are appropriate; when models are required.

Hershberger, Wayne. (Ed.). (1989). _Volitional action: Conation
and control_ (Advances in Psychology No. 62). NY: North-Holland.
     25 articles (not all PCT)

Ford, Edward E. (1989). _Freedom from stress_. Scottsdale AZ:
Brandt Publishing.
     A self-help book. PCT in a counseling framework.

Gibbons, Hugh. (1990). _The death of Jeffrey Stapleton:
Exploring the way lawyers think_. Concord, NH: Franklin Pierce
Law Center.
     A text for law students using control theory.

McClelland, Kent. (1992). _Perceptual control and sociological
theory_. Not yet published. Available from the author,
         Grinnell University, Grinnell, Iowa.

McPhail, Clark. (1990). _The myth of the madding crowd_.
New York: Aldine de Gruyter.
     Introduces control theory to explain group behavior.

McPhail, Clark., Powers, William T., & Tucker, Charles W.
(1992). Simulating individual and collective action In temporary
gatherings. _Social Science Computer Review_, _10_(1), 1-28.
     Computer simulation of control systems in groups.

Petrie, Hugh G. (1981). _The dilemma of inquiry and learning_.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press

···

To: SERVER@BIOME.BIO.NS.CA.

INTRODUCTION TO THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP (CSG)
        AND THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP NETWORK(CSGnet)

             Prepared by Dag Forssell 1992.11.18
             Updated by Gary Cziko 1994.01.08

This introduction provides information about:

   Our subject: Perceptual Control Theory
   The evolution of the control paradigm
   Demonstrating the Phenomenon of Control
   The purpose of CSGnet
   CSGnet participants
   Asking questions
   The Control Systems Group
   Subscribing to CSGnet
   How to obtain text and program files
   Literature references
   CSG Book Order Form

OUR SUBJECT: PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY

Here are two introductions by Bill and Mary Powers:

  There have been two paradigms in the behavioral sciences since
  the 1600's. One was the idea that events impinging on
  organisms make them behave as they do. The other, which was
  developed in the 1930's, is PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY (PCT).
  Perceptual Control Theory explains how organisms control what
  happens to them. This means all organisms from the amoeba to
  humankind. It explains why one organism can't control another
  without physical violence. It explains why people deprived of
  any major part of their ability to control soon become
  dysfunctional, lose interest in life, pine away and die. It
  explains what a goal is, how goals relate to action, how
  action affects perceptions and how perceptions define the
  reality in which we live and move and have our being.
  Perceptual Control Theory is the first scientific theory that
  can handle all these phenomena within a single, testable
  concept of how living systems work.

                      William T. Powers, November 3, 1991

  PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY

  While the existence of control mechanisms and processes (such
  as feedback) in living systems is generally recognized, the
  implications of control organization go far beyond what is
  generally accepted. We believe that a fundamental
  characteristic of organisms is their ability to control; that
  they are, in fact, living control systems. To distinguish this
  approach from others using some version of control theory but
  forcing it to fit conventional approaches, we call ours
  Perceptual Control Theory, or PCT.

  PCT requires a major shift in thinking from the traditional
  approach: that what is controlled is not behavior, but
  perception. Modelling behavior as a dependent variable, as a
  response to stimuli, provides no explanation for the
  phenomenon of achieving consistent ends through varying means,
  and requires an extensive use of statistics to achieve modest
  (to the point of meaningless) correlations. Attempts to model
  behavior as planned and computed output can be demonstrated to
  require levels of precise calculation that are unobtainable in
  a physical system, and impossible in a real environment that
  is changing from one moment to the next. The PCT model views
  behavior as the means by which a perceived state of affairs is
  brought to and maintained at a reference state. This approach
  provides a physically plausible explanation for the
  consistency of outcomes and the variability of means.

  The PCT model has been used to simulate phenomena as diverse
  as bacterial chemotaxis, tracking a target, and behavior in
  crowds. In its elaborated form, a hierarchy of perceptual
  control systems (HPCT), it has lent itself to a computer
  simulation of tracking, including learning to track, and to
  new approaches to education, management, and psychotherapy.

  Control systems are not new in the life sciences. However,
  numerous misapprehensions exist, passed down from what was
  learned about control theory by non-engineers 40 or 50 years
  ago without further reference to newer developments or
  correction of initial misunderstandings. References in the
  literature to the desirability of positive feedback and the
  assertion that systems with feedback are slower than S-R
  systems are simply false, and concerns about stability are
  unfounded.

  The primary barrier to the adoption of PCT concepts is the
  belief - or hope - that control theory can simply be absorbed
  into the mainstream life sciences without disturbing the
  status quo. It is very hard to believe that one's training and
  life work, and that of one's mentors, and their mentors, must
  be fundamentally revised. Therefore, PCT appeals to those who
  feel some dissatisfaction with the status quo, or who are
  attracted to the idea of a generative model with broad
  application throughout the life sciences (plus AI and
  robotics). There are very few people working in PCT research.
  Much of its promise is still simply promise, and it meets
  resistance from all sides. It is frustrating but also
  tremendously exciting to be a part of the group who believe
  that they are participating in the birth of a true science of
  life.
                        Mary Powers, November 1992

THE EVOLUTION OF THE CONTROL PARADIGM

The PCT paradigm originates in 1927, when an engineer named
Harold Black recognized and clearly described a closed loop
control system as a special kind of mechanism. He was working
with the negative feedback amplifier, which is a control device.
This led to a new engineering discipline and the development
of many purposeful machines. Purposeful machines have built-in
intent to achieve consistent ends by variable means under
changing conditions.

The discovery and formalization of the phenomenon of control is
the first alternative to the cause-effect perspective ever
proposed in any science.

The first discussion of purposeful machines and people came in
1943 in a paper called: Behavior, Purpose and Teleology by
Rosenblueth, Wiener and Bigelow. This paper also argued that
purpose belongs in science as a real phenomenon in the present.
Purpose does not mean that somehow the future influences the
present.

The first specific suggestion on how to use the concept of
control to understand people came in 1957 in a paper entitled:
A General Feedback Theory of Human Behavior by McFarland, Powers
and Clark.

In 1973 William T. (Bill) Powers published a seminal book called
"Behavior: the Control of Perception," which still is the major
reference for PCT. See literature below.

This book spells out a complete model of how the human brain and
nervous system works like a living perceptual control system.
Our brain can be viewed as a system that controls its own
perceptions. This view suggests explanations for many previously
mysterious aspects of how people interact with their world.

Perceptual Control Theory has been accepted by independently
thinking psychologists, scientists and other interested people.
The result is that an association has been formed (the Control
System Group), several books published, this CSGnet set up and
that at latest count 16 professors are teaching PCT in American
universities today.

DEMONSTRATING THE PHENOMENON OF CONTROL

The phenomenon of control is largely unrecognized in science
today. It is not well understood in important aspects even by
many control engineers. Yet the phenomenon of control, when it
is recognized and understood, provides a powerful enhancement to
scientific perspectives.

It is essential to recognize that this phenomenon exists and
deserves an explanation before any of the discourse on CSGnet
will make sense.

Please download the introductory demonstration dem1a.exe, which
is an interactive program and/or rubberbd.txt, which is a text
telling you how to demonstrate the phenomenon to yourself and a
friend using only two rubber bands.

THE PURPOSE OF CSGnet:

CSGnet provides a forum for development, use and testing of PCT.

CSGnet PARTICIPANTS

Many interests and backgrounds are represented here. Psychology,
Sociology, Linguistics, Artificial Intelligence, Robotics,
Social Work, Neurology, Modeling and Testing. All are
represented and discussed. As of May 1993 there were
about 140 individuals from 19 countries subscribed to CSGnet.

ASKING QUESTIONS

Please introduce yourself with a statement of your professional
interests and background. It will help someone answer if you
spell out which demonstrations, introductory papers and
references you have taken the time to digest.

THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP

The CSG is an organization of people in the behavioral, social,
and life sciences who see the potential in PCT for increased
understanding in their own fields and for the unification of
diverse and fragmented specialties.

Annual dues are $45 for full members and $5 for students
(subsidized).

The tenth North American annual meeting of the CSG will held in
Durango, Colorado, on the campus of Fort Lewis College. It will
be held 27-31 July 1994. There will be 7 plenary meetings
(mornings and evenings), with afternoons, mealtimes, and late
night free for further discussion or recreation. Full details
will be available on CSGnet or by mail after April 1, 1994.

The first meeting of the European Control Systems Group (ECSG)
will be held on 22-26 June 1994, in Aberystwyth, Wales, UK.
Further information can be obtained from Marcos Rodrigues
<mar@aber.ac.uk>.

Net subscribers find it useful to have thematic collections of
some of the network discussions, and it enables non-net members
to keep up with them. Threads from this net are published on a
quarterly basis in a booklet called the Closed Loop. These
booklets, distributed to members, are available separately.
A complimentary copy of Closed Loop will be sent upon request.
Back issues are available: Volume 1 (4 issues) is $12. Single
issues of Volume 2, beginning with Jan. 1992, are $6 each.

For membership information and back issues of Closed Loop,
write: CSG, c/o Mary Powers, 73 Ridge Place CR 510, Durango, CO
81301-8136.

SUBSCRIBING TO CSGnet

When you subscribe to CSGnet, you get this message,
CSGINTRO.DOC. But you may have received it from a friend who
printed it, seen it on a demodisk, or seen it on Usenet. To
subscribe, send a message as follows: (Internet address followed
by two message commands, one per line)

  LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
  Subscribe CSG-L Lastname, Firstname, Affiliation, City, State.
  help

(Lastname, Firstname, etc is optional commentary, but helpful).
("help" requests a list of most commonly used commands).
(The Bitnet address is: LISTSERV@UIUCVMD).
(This server is not sensitive to upper or lower case letters).

CSGnet can also be accessed via Usenet (NetNews) where it is
listed as the newsgroup bit.listserv.csg-l.

For more information about accessing CSGnet, contact Gary Cziko,
the network manager, at G-CZIKO@UIUC.EDU

HOW TO OBTAIN TEXT AND PROGRAM FILES

A number of ASCII documents and binary computer programs are
available on a fileserver maintained by Bill Silvert. It is
possible to download all these files via e-mail. If you are on
internet, it is easiest to obtain binary program files via
anonymous FTP. If you are on MCI mail, you have read about how
you can transfer binary files with Kermit or Zmodem protocols.
(Type help at the MCI mail prompt for directions). But the
server cannot send binary files over the internet mail network,
so download uue.scr first, then request the binary files
uuencoded as ASCII files. The Internet address for the server is
BIOME.BIO.NS.CA. CSGnet files are kept in the subdirectory
pub/csg.

To get basic information and a current listing of available
documents, send a message as follows: (Internet)

Commands: help
            ftp
            get csg/Index
            end

"help" requests commands and explanations.
"ftp" asks details on anonymous FTP for internet.
"get csg/Index" requests the Index for the csg subdirectory.

Pay attention to letter case for commands! DOS is not dos.

As part of the index (of the csg directory), you may be looking
at:

programs/msdos:
dem1a.exe 128437 Bill Power's demonstr of perceptual control
dem2a.exe 123649 Bill Power's modelling of control

documents/forssell:
uud.scr 53406 ASCII Compile uud.exe w DOS debug Dir @ end.

If you want dem1a.exe (uuencoded) to get a "live" demonstration
of the phenomenon of control, and the ASCII file uud.scr with
directions at the end on how to use DOS debug to compile uud.exe
to decode it, send the following message commands:

uue csg/programs/msdos/dem1a.exe
get csg/programs/forssell/uud.scr

The uuencoded dem1a.exe will be sent in four parts. Remove
headers and use an editor to make it into one file (starting
with table and ending with end) before you use uud.exe to
restore the file. dem1a.exe is a self-extracting archive file.
Put it in it's own directory before you execute it. You get
complete documentation and a running program.

REFERENCES

Here are some selected books, papers and computer programs
on Perceptual Control Theory (entries preceded by an asterisk are available
from The Control Systems Group, 460 Black Lick Road,
Gravel Switch, KY 40328. See order form below).

For a complete list of CSG-related publications, get the file
biblio.pct from the fileserver as described above.
Entries preceded by an asterisk in the partial list shown here
are available from: The Control Systems Group, 460 Black Lick
Road, Gravel Switch, KY 40328. Price shown includes mailing
by surface worldwide.

Forssell, Dag C., (1993). Perceptual Control: A Key Management
Insight." In ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 5(4), 17-25.
     Introduction to PCT as an answer to leadership issues.

Forssell, Dag C. (Ed.), (1994). PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY: DOS
COMPUTER DEMONSTRATIN, TUTORIALS, SIMULATIONS, EXPLANATIONS.
     Dag Forssell, Purposeful Leadership, 23903 Via Flamenco,
     Valencia, CA, USA:
     Available on 1.44 MB 3 1/2 inch disk (1 ea) or 1.2 MB
     5 1/4 inch disk (2 ea). May be copied
     freely. $10 U.S. postpaid by air world wide.

Powers, William T. (1973). BEHAVIOR: THE CONTROL OF
PERCEPTION. Hawthorne, NY: Aldine DeGruyter.
     The basic text.

Petrie, Hugh G. (1981). THE DILEMMA OF INQUIRY AND LEARNING.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Ford, Edward E. (1989). FREEDOM FROM STRESS. Scottsdale AZ:
Brandt Publishing.
     A self-help book. PCT in a counseling framework.

Hershberger, Wayne. (Ed.). (1989). VOLITIONAL ACTION: CONATION
AND CONTROL (Advances in Psychology No. 62). NY: North-Holland.
     25 articles (not all PCT)

*Powers, William T. (1989). LIVING CONTROL SYSTEMS: SELECTED
PAPERS. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($16.50 postpaid)
     Previously published papers, 1960-1988.

Gibbons, Hugh. (1990). THE DEATH OF JEFFREY STAPLETON:
EXPLORING THE WAY LAWYERS THINK. Concord, NH: Franklin Pierce
Law Center.
     A text for law students using control theory.

Marken, Richard S. (Ed.). (1990). Purposeful Behavior: The
control theory approach. AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST,
34(1). (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications)
     11 articles on control theory.

McPhail, Clark. (1990). THE MYTH OF THE MADDING CROWD.
New York: Aldine de Gruyter.
     Introduces control theory to explain group behavior.

*Robertson, Richard J. and Powers, William T. (Eds.). (1990).
INTRODUCTION TO MODERN PSYCHOLOGY: THE CONTROL THEORY VIEW.
Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Book. ($25 postpaid)
     College-level text.

Runkel, Philip J. (1990). CASTING NETS AND TESTING SPECIMENS.
New York: Praeger.
     When statistics are appropriate; when models are required.

Richardson, George P. (1991). FEEDBACK THOUGHT IN SOCIAL
SCIENCE AND SYSTEMS THEORY. Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Press.
     A review of systems thinking, including PCT.

*Marken, Richard S. (1992). MIND READINGS: EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES
OF PURPOSE. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($18 postpaid)
     Research papers exploring control.

McClelland, Kent. (In press). Perceptual Control and Social Power.
SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES.

McPhail, Clark., Powers, William T., & Tucker, Charles W.
(1992). Simulating individual and collective action In temporary
gatherings. SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW, 10(1), 1-28.
     Computer simulation of control systems in groups.

Cziko, Gary A. (1992). Purposeful behavior as the control
of perception: Implications for educational research.
EDUCATIONAL RESEARCHER, 21(9), 10-18, 27. (and...)
        Introduction to PCT and implications for educational
        research.

Cziko, Gary A. (1992). Perceptual control theory: One threat
to educational research not (yet?) faced by Amundson,
Serlin, and Lehrer. EDUCATIONAL RESEARCHER, 21(9), 25-27.
       Response to critics of previous article.

*Powers, William T. (1992). LIVING CONTROL SYSTEMS II: SELECTED
PAPERS. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($22 postpaid)
     Previously unpublished papers, 1959-1990

Forssell, Dag C., (1993). Perceptual Control: A Key Management
Insight." In ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 5(4), 17-25.
     Introduction to PCT as an answer to leadership issues.

Forssell, Dag C. (Ed.), (1994). PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY: DOS
COMPUTER DEMONSTRATIN, TUTORIALS, SIMULATIONS, EXPLANATIONS.
     Dag Forssell, Purposeful Leadership, 23903 Via Flamenco,
     Valencia, CA, USA:
     1.44 MB 3 1/2 inch disk (1 ea) or 1.2 MB
     5 1/4 inch disk (2 ea). May be freely copied
     $10 U.S. by air world wide.
     Write: Purposeful Leadership, 23903 Via Flamenco,
     Valencia, CA, USA

···

To: SERVER@BIOME.BIO.NS.CA

===========================================================

CSG BOOK ORDER FORM (from Greg Williams, CSG Book Publishing)

After so many mentions of CSG books on CSGnet, I should make it
easy for all of you folks to order them. Just send the following
with your check or money order (U.S. funds ONLY). All prices are
postpaid via book post (send extra if you want books fast). If
you order five or more books (mixed or matched), you can take
off a 20% discount, but I will bill you for actual shipping.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

TO: CSG Book Publishing
    460 Black Lick Rd.
    Gravel Switch, KY 40328

PLEASE SEND THE FOLLOWING:

_____ copies of LIVING CONTROL SYSTEMS @ $16.50

_____ copies of LIVING CONTROL SYSTEMS II @ $22.00

_____ copies of INTRODUCTION TO MODERN PSYCHOLOGY @ $25.00

_____ copies of MIND READINGS @ $18.00

NAME _________________________________________________________

ADDRESS ______________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________

INTRODUCTION TO THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP NETWORK (CSGnet)
             AND TO THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP
             Prepared by Dag Forssell 921118
             Updated 930501 by Gary Cziko

This introduction provides information about:

   Our subject: Perceptual Control Theory
   The evolution of the control paradigm
   Demonstrating the Phenomenon of Control
   The purpose of CSGnet
   CSGnet participants
   Asking questions
   The Control Systems Group
   Subscribing to CSGnet
   How to obtain text and program files
   Literature references

OUR SUBJECT: PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY

Here are two introductions by Bill and Mary Powers:

  There have been two paradigms in the behavioral sciences since
  the 1600's. One was the idea that events impinging on
  organisms make them behave as they do. The other, which was
  developed in the 1930's, is PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY (PCT).
  Perceptual Control Theory explains how organisms control what
  happens to them. This means all organisms from the amoeba to
  humankind. It explains why one organism can't control another
  without physical violence. It explains why people deprived of
  any major part of their ability to control soon become
  dysfunctional, lose interest in life, pine away and die. It
  explains what a goal is, how goals relate to action, how
  action affects perceptions and how perceptions define the
  reality in which we live and move and have our being.
  Perceptual Control Theory is the first scientific theory that
  can handle all these phenomena within a single, testable
  concept of how living systems work.

                      William T. Powers, November 3, 1991

  PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY

  While the existence of control mechanisms and processes (such
  as feedback) in living systems is generally recognized, the
  implications of control organization go far beyond what is
  generally accepted. We believe that a fundamental
  characteristic of organisms is their ability to control; that
  they are, in fact, living control systems. To distinguish this
  approach from others using some version of control theory but
  forcing it to fit conventional approaches, we call ours
  Perceptual Control Theory, or PCT.

  PCT requires a major shift in thinking from the traditional
  approach: that what is controlled is not behavior, but
  perception. Modelling behavior as a dependent variable, as a
  response to stimuli, provides no explanation for the
  phenomenon of achieving consistent ends through varying means,
  and requires an extensive use of statistics to achieve modest
  (to the point of meaningless) correlations. Attempts to model
  behavior as planned and computed output can be demonstrated to
  require levels of precise calculation that are unobtainable in
  a physical system, and impossible in a real environment that
  is changing from one moment to the next. The PCT model views
  behavior as the means by which a perceived state of affairs is
  brought to and maintained at a reference state. This approach
  provides a physically plausible explanation for the
  consistency of outcomes and the variability of means.

  The PCT model has been used to simulate phenomena as diverse
  as bacterial chemotaxis, tracking a target, and behavior in
  crowds. In its elaborated form, a hierarchy of perceptual
  control systems (HPCT), it has lent itself to a computer
  simulation of tracking, including learning to track, and to
  new approaches to education, management, and psychotherapy.

  Control systems are not new in the life sciences. However,
  numerous misapprehensions exist, passed down from what was
  learned about control theory by non-engineers 40 or 50 years
  ago without further reference to newer developments or
  correction of initial misunderstandings. References in the
  literature to the desirability of positive feedback and the
  assertion that systems with feedback are slower than S-R
  systems are simply false, and concerns about stability are
  unfounded.

  The primary barrier to the adoption of PCT concepts is the
  belief - or hope - that control theory can simply be absorbed
  into the mainstream life sciences without disturbing the
  status quo. It is very hard to believe that one's training and
  life work, and that of one's mentors, and their mentors, must
  be fundamentally revised. Therefore, PCT appeals to those who
  feel some dissatisfaction with the status quo, or who are
  attracted to the idea of a generative model with broad
  application throughout the life sciences (plus AI and
  robotics). There are very few people working in PCT research.
  Much of its promise is still simply promise, and it meets
  resistance from all sides. It is frustrating but also
  tremendously exciting to be a part of the group who believe
  that they are participating in the birth of a true science of
  life.
                        Mary Powers, November 1992

THE EVOLUTION OF THE CONTROL PARADIGM

The PCT paradigm originates in 1927, when an engineer named
Harold Black invented the negative feedback amplifier, which is
a control device. This invention led to the development of
purposeful machines. Purposeful machines have built-in intent to
achieve consistent ends by variable means under changing
conditions.

The discovery and formalization of the phenomenon of control is
the first alternative to the cause-effect perspective ever
proposed in any science.

The first discussion of purposeful machines and people came in
1943 in a paper called: Behavior, Purpose and Teleology by
Rosenblueth, Wiener and Bigelow. This paper also argued that
purpose belongs in science as a real phenomenon in the present.
Purpose does not mean that somehow the future influences the
present.

The first specific suggestion on how to use the concept of
control to understand people came in 1957 in a paper entitled:
A General Feedback Theory of Human Behavior by McFarland, Powers
and Clark.

In 1973 William T. (Bill) Powers published a seminal book called
"Behavior: the Control of Perception," which still is the major
reference for PCT. See literature below.

This book spells out a complete model of how the human brain and
nervous system works like a living perceptual control system.
Our brain can be viewed as a system that controls its own
perceptions. This view suggests explanations for many previously
mysterious aspects of how people interact with their world.

Perceptual Control Theory has been accepted by independently
thinking psychologists, scientists and other interested people.
The result is that an association has been formed (the Control
System Group), several books published, this CSGnet set up and
that at latest count 16 professors are teaching PCT in American
universities today.

DEMONSTRATING THE PHENOMENON OF CONTROL

The phenomenon of control is largely unrecognized in science
today. It is not well understood in important aspects even by
many control engineers. Yet the phenomenon of control, when it
is recognized and understood, provides a powerful enhancement to
scientific perspectives.

It is essential to recognize that this phenomenon exists and
deserves an explanation before any of the discourse on CSGnet
will make sense.

Please download the introductory demonstration dem1a.exe, which
is an interactive program and/or rubberbd.txt, which is a text
telling you how to demonstrate the phenomenon to yourself and a
friend using only two rubber bands.

THE PURPOSE OF CSGnet:

CSGnet provides a forum for development, use and testing of PCT.

CSGnet PARTICIPANTS

Many interests and backgrounds are represented here. Psychology,
Sociology, Linguistics, Artificial Intelligence, Robotics,
Social Work, Neurology, Modeling and Testing. All are
represented and discussed. As of May 1993 there were
about 140 individuals from 19 countries subscribed to CSGnet.

ASKING QUESTIONS

Please introduce yourself with a statement of your professional
interests and background. It will help someone answer if you
spell out which demonstrations, introductory papers and
references you have taken the time to digest.

THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP

The CSG is an organization of people in the behavioral, social,
and life sciences who see the potential in PCT for increased
understanding in their own fields and for the unification of
diverse and fragmented specialties.

Annual dues are $45 for full members and $5 for students
(subsidized).

The next annual meeting will held in Durango, Colorado,
on the campus of
Fort Lewis College. In 1993 it will begin in the evening of
Wednesday, July 28, and end Sunday morning, Aug, 1. There will
be 7 plenary meetings (mornings and evenings), with afternoons,
mealtimes, and late night free for further discussion or
recreation. Full details will be available on the net or by mail
after April 1, 1993.

The first meeting of the European Control Systems Group (ECSG)
is planned to take place in late May or early June of 1994 at the
University of Wales at Aberystwyth. Further information can
be obtained from Marcos Rodrigues <mar@ABER.AC.UK>.

Net subscribers find it useful to have thematic collections of
some of the network discussions, and it enables non-net members
to keep up with them. Threads from this net are published on a
quarterly basis in a booklet called the Closed Loop. These
booklets are distributed to members and are available
separately. A complimentary copy of Closed Loop will be sent
upon request. Back issues are available: Volume 1 (4 issues) is
$12. Single issues of Volume 2, beginning with Jan. 1992, are $6
each.

For membership information and back issues of Closed Loop,
write: CSG, c/o Mary Powers, 73 Ridge Place CR 510, Durango, CO
81301-8136.

SUBSCRIBING TO CSGnet

When you subscribe to CSGnet, you get this message,
CSGINTRO.DOC. But you may have received it from a friend who
printed it, seen it on a demodisk, or seen it on Usenet. To
subscribe, send a message as follows: (Internet address followed
by two message commands, one per line)

  LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
  Subscribe CSG-L Lastname, Firstname, Affiliation, City, State.
  help

(Lastname, Firstname, etc is optional commentary, but helpful).
("help" requests a list of most commonly used commands).
(The Bitnet address is: LISTSERV@UIUCVMD).
(This server is not sensitive to upper or lower case letters).

CSGnet can also be accessed via Usenet (NetNews) where it is
listed as the newsgroup bit.listserv.csg-l.

For more information about accessing CSGnet, contact Gary Cziko,
the network manager, at G-CZIKO@UIUC.EDU

HOW TO OBTAIN TEXT AND PROGRAM FILES

A number of ASCII documents and binary computer programs are
available on a fileserver maintained by Bill Silvert. It is
possible to download all these files via e-mail. If you are on
internet, it is easiest to obtain binary program files via
anonymous FTP. If you are on MCI mail, you have read about how
you can transfer binary files with Kermit or Zmodem protocols.
(Type help at the MCI mail prompt for directions). But the
server cannot send binary files over the internet mail network,
so download uue.scr first, then request the binary files
uuencoded as ASCII files. The Internet address for the server is
BIOME.BIO.NS.CA. CSGnet files are kept in the subdirectory
pub/csg.

To get basic information and a current listing of available
documents, send a message as follows: (Internet)

Commands: help
            ftp
            get csg/Index
            end

"help" requests commands and explanations.
"ftp" asks details on anonymous FTP for internet.
"get csg/Index" requests the Index for the csg subdirectory.

Pay attention to letter case for commands! DOS is not dos.

As part of the index (of the csg directory), you may be looking
at:

programs/msdos:
dem1a.exe 128437 Bill Power's demonstr of perceptual control
dem2a.exe 123649 Bill Power's modelling of control

documents/forssell:
uud.scr 53406 ASCII Compile uud.exe w DOS debug Dir @ end.

If you want dem1a.exe (uuencoded) to get a "live" demonstration
of the phenomenon of control, and the ASCII file uud.scr with
directions at the end on how to use DOS debug to compile uud.exe
to decode it, send the following message commands:

uue csg/programs/msdos/dem1a.exe
get csg/programs/forssell/uud.scr

The uuencoded dem1a.exe will be sent in four parts. Remove
headers and use an editor to make it into one file (starting
with table and ending with end) before you use uud.exe to
restore the file. dem1a.exe is a self-extracting archive file.
Put it in it's own directory before you execute it. You get
complete documentation and a running program.

REFERENCES

For a complete list of CSG-related publications, get the file
biblio.pct from the fileserver as described above.

Here are some selected books and papers on Perceptual Control
Theory (entries preceded by an asterisk are available from
The Control Systems Group, 460 Black Lick Road, Gravel Switch,
KY 40328).

Powers, William T. (1973). _Behavior: The control of
perception_. Hawthorne, NY: Aldine DeGruyter.
     The basic text.

Petrie, Hugh G. (1981). _The dilemma of inquiry and learning_.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Ford, Edward E. (1989). _Freedom from stress_. Scottsdale AZ:
Brandt Publishing.
     A self-help book. PCT in a counseling framework.

Hershberger, Wayne. (Ed.). (1989). _Volitional action: Conation
and control_ (Advances in Psychology No. 62). NY: North-Holland.
     25 articles (not all PCT)

*Powers, William T. (1989). _Living control systems: Selected
papers_. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($16.50 postpaid)
     Previously published papers, 1960-1988.

Gibbons, Hugh. (1990). _The death of Jeffrey Stapleton:
Exploring the way lawyers think_. Concord, NH: Franklin Pierce
Law Center.
     A text for law students using control theory.

Marken, Richard S. (Ed.). (1990). Purposeful Behavior: The
control theory approach. _American Behavioral Scientist_,
_34_(1). (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications)
     11 articles on control theory.

McPhail, Clark. (1990). _The myth of the madding crowd_.
New York: Aldine de Gruyter.
     Introduces control theory to explain group behavior.

*Robertson, Richard J. and Powers, William T. (Eds.). (1990).
_Introduction to modern psychology: The control theory view_.
Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Book. ($25 postpaid)
     College-level text.

Runkel, Philip J. (1990). _Casting nets and testing specimens_.
New York: Praeger.
     When statistics are appropriate; when models are required.

Richardson, George P. (1991). _Feedback thought in social
science and systems theory_. Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Press.
     A review of systems thinking, including PCT.

*Marken, Richard S. (1992). _Mind readings: Experimental studies
of purpose_. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($18 postpaid)
     Research papers exploring control.

McClelland, Kent. (1992). _Perceptual control and sociological
theory_. Not yet published. Available from the author,
         Grinnell University, Grinnell, Iowa.

McPhail, Clark., Powers, William T., & Tucker, Charles W.
(1992). Simulating individual and collective action In temporary
gatherings. _Social Science Computer Review_, _10_(1), 1-28.
     Computer simulation of control systems in groups.

Cziko, Gary A. (1992). Purposeful behavior as the control
of perception: Implications for educational research.
_Educational Researcher_, _21_(9), 10-18, 27. (and...)

Cziko, Gary A. (1992). Perceptual control theory: One threat
to educational research not (yet?) faced by Amundson,
Serlin, and Lehrer. _Educational Researcher_, _21_(9), 25-27.
        Introduction to PCT and implications for educational
        research.

*Powers, William T. (1992). _Living control systems II: Selected
papers_. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($22 postpaid)
     Previously unpublished papers, 1959-1990.

···

To: SERVER@BIOME.BIO.NS.CA.

INTRODUCTION TO THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP (CSG)
         AND THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP NETWORK (CSGnet)

            Prepared by Dag Forssell with Gary Cziko
                       Updated 1994.04.29

This introduction provides information about:

     Our Subject: Perceptual Control Theory
     The Evolution of the Control Paradigm
     Demonstrating the Phenomenon of Control
     The Purpose of CSGnet
     CSGnet Participants
     Asking Questions
     The Control Systems Group
     Accessing and Subscribing to CSGnet
     How to Obtain Text and Program Files
     References
     Order Forms

             OUR SUBJECT: PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY

Here are two introductions by Bill and Mary Powers:

                         * * * * * * * *

There have been two paradigms in the behavioral sciences since
the 1600's. One was the idea that events impinging on organisms
make them behave as they do. The other, which was developed in
the 1930's, is PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY (PCT). Perceptual
Control Theory explains how organisms control what happens to
them. This means all organisms from the amoeba to humankind. It
explains why one organism can't control another without physical
violence. It explains why people deprived of any major part of
their ability to control soon become dysfunctional, lose interest
in life, pine away and die. It explains what a goal is, how
goals relate to action, how action affects perceptions and how
perceptions define the reality in which we live and move and have
our being. Perceptual Control Theory is the first scientific
theory that can handle all these phenomena within a single,
testable concept of how living systems work.

                              William T. Powers, November 3, 1991

                         * * * * * * * *

While the existence of control mechanisms and processes (such as
feedback) in living systems is generally recognized, the
implications of control organization go far beyond what is
generally accepted. We believe that a fundamental characteristic
of organisms is their ability to control; that they are, in fact,
living control systems. To distinguish this approach from others
using some version of control theory but forcing it to fit
conventional approaches, we call ours Perceptual Control Theory,
or PCT.

PCT requires a major shift in thinking from the traditional
approach: that what is controlled is not behavior, but
perception. Modelling behavior as a dependent variable, as a
response to stimuli, provides no explanation for the phenomenon
of achieving consistent ends through varying means, and requires
an extensive use of statistics to achieve modest (to the point of
meaningless) correlations. Attempts to model behavior as planned
and computed output can be demonstrated to require levels of
precise calculation that are unobtainable in a physical system,
and impossible in a real environment that is changing from one
moment to the next. The PCT model views behavior as the means by
which a perceived state of affairs is brought to and maintained
at a reference state. This approach provides a physically
plausible explanation for the consistency of outcomes and the
variability of means.

The PCT model has been used to simulate phenomena as diverse as
bacterial chemotaxis, tracking a target, and behavior in crowds.
In its elaborated form, a hierarchy of perceptual control systems
(HPCT), it has lent itself to a computer simulation of tracking,
including learning to track, and to new approaches to education,
management, and psychotherapy.

Control systems are not new in the life sciences. However,
numerous misapprehensions exist, passed down from what was
learned about control theory by non-engineers 40 or 50 years ago
without further reference to newer developments or correction of
initial misunderstandings. References in the literature to the
desirability of positive feedback and the assertion that systems
with feedback are slower than S-R systems are simply false, and
concerns about stability are unfounded.

The primary barrier to the adoption of PCT concepts is the belief-
-or hope--that control theory can simply be absorbed into the
mainstream life sciences without disturbing the status quo. It
is very hard to believe that one's training and life work, and
that of one's mentors, and their mentors, must be fundamentally
revised. Therefore, PCT appeals to those who feel some
dissatisfaction with the status quo, or who are attracted to the
idea of a generative model with broad application throughout the
life sciences (plus AI and robotics). There are very few people
working in PCT research. Much of its promise is still simply
promise, and it meets resistance from all sides. It is
frustrating but also tremendously exciting to be a part of the
group who believe that they are participating in the birth of a
true science of life.
                                       Mary Powers, November 1992

                         * * * * * * * *

              THE EVOLUTION OF THE CONTROL PARADIGM

The PCT paradigm originates in 1927, when an engineer named
Harold Black completed the technical analysis of closed loop
control systems. He was working with the negative feedback
amplifier, which is a control device. This led to a new
engineering discipline and the development of many purposeful
machines. Purposeful machines have built-in intent to achieve
consistent ends by variable means under changing conditions.

The explanation for the phenomenon of control is the first
alternative to the linear cause-effect perspective ever
proposed in any science.

The first discussion of purposeful machines and people came in
1943 in a paper called: Behavior, Purpose and Teleology by
Rosenblueth, Wiener and Bigelow. This paper also argued that
purpose belongs in science as a real phenomenon in the present.
Purpose does not mean that somehow the future influences the
present.

The first specific suggestion on how to use the concept of
control to understand people came in 1957 in a paper entitled: A
General Feedback Theory of Human Behavior by McFarland, Powers
and Clark.

In 1973 William T. (Bill) Powers published a seminal book called
"Behavior: the Control of Perception," which still is the major
reference for PCT. See literature below.

This book spells out a complete model of how the human brain and
nervous system works like a living perceptual control system. Our
brain can be viewed as a system that controls its own
perceptions. This view suggests explanations for many previously
mysterious aspects of how people interact with their world.

Perceptual Control Theory has been accepted by independently
thinking psychologists, scientists and other interested people.
The result is that an association has been formed (the Control
System Group), several books published, this CSGnet set up and
that at latest count 16 professors are teaching PCT in American
universities today.

             DEMONSTRATING THE PHENOMENON OF CONTROL

The phenomenon of control is largely unrecognized in science
today. It is not well understood in important aspects even by
many control engineers. Yet the phenomenon of control, when it is
recognized and understood, provides a powerful enhancement to
scientific perspectives.

It is essential to recognize that this phenomenon exists and
deserves an explanation before any of the discourse on CSGnet
will make sense.

Please download the introductory demonstration dem1a.exe, which
is an interactive program and/or rubberbd.txt, which is a text
telling you how to demonstrate the phenomenon to yourself and a
friend using only two rubber bands.

                      THE PURPOSE OF CSGnet

CSGnet provides a forum for development, use and testing of PCT.

                       CSGnet PARTICIPANTS

Many interests and backgrounds are represented here. Psychology,
Sociology, Linguistics, Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, Social
Work, Neurology, Modeling and Testing. All are represented and
discussed. As of May 1993 there were about 140 individuals from
19 countries subscribed to CSGnet.

                        ASKING QUESTIONS

Please introduce yourself with a statement of your professional
interests and background. It will help someone answer if you
spell out which demonstrations, introductory papers and
references you have taken the time to digest.

                    THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP

The CSG is an organization of people in the behavioral, social,
and life sciences who see the potential in PCT for increased
understanding in their own fields and for the unification of
diverse and fragmented specialties.

Annual dues are $45 for full members and $5 for students
(subsidized).

The tenth North American annual meeting of the CSG will held in
Durango, Colorado, on the campus of Fort Lewis College. It will
be held 27-31 July 1994. There will be 7 plenary meetings
(mornings and evenings), with afternoons, mealtimes, and late
night free for further discussion or recreation. Full details
will be available on CSGnet or by mail after April 1, 1994. The
first meeting of the European Control Systems Group (ECSG) will
be held on 22-26 June 1994, in Aberystwyth, Wales, UK. Further
information can be obtained from Marcos Rodrigues
<mar@aber.ac.uk>.

Net subscribers find it useful to have thematic collections of
some of the network discussions, and it enables non-net members
to keep up with them. Threads from this net are published on a
quarterly basis in a booklet called the Closed Loop. These
booklets, distributed to members, are available separately. A
complimentary copy of Closed Loop will be sent upon request.
Back issues are available: Volume 1 (4 issues) is $12. Single
issues of Volume 2, beginning with Jan. 1992, are $6 each.

For membership information and back issues of Closed Loop, write:
CSG, c/o Mary Powers, 73 Ridge Place CR 510, Durango, CO 81301-
8136 or send e-mail to <POWERS_W%FLC@VAXF.COLORADO.EDU>.

               ACCESSING AND SUBSCRIBING TO CSGnet

CSGnet can also be accessed via Usenet where it is listed as the
newsgroup "bit.listserv.csg-l."

To subscribe to the listserv version of CSGnet, send a message as
follows to <LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU>:

Subscribe CSG-L Lastname, Firstname, Affiliation, Location
Help

"Lastname, Firstname," etc is optional but helpful. "Help"
requests a list of most commonly used commands. The Bitnet
address for the list server is LISTSERV@UIUCVMD. This server is
not case sensitive.

Messages to the entire CSGnet community should be addressed to
<CSG-L@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU> (Internet) or <CSG-L@UIUCVMD> (Bitnet).

For more information about accessing CSGnet, contact Gary Cziko,
the network manager, at <G-CZIKO@UIUC.EDU>.

              HOW TO OBTAIN TEXT AND PROGRAM FILES

A number of ASCII documents and MS-DOS and Macintosh computer
programs are available on a fileserver maintained by Bill
Silvert. These files can be obtained via anonymous FTP, Gopher,
World Wide Web, and e-mail.

ANONYMOUS FTP

For anonymous FTP access, connect to biome.bio.ns.ca, logon as
anonymous, giving your e-mail address as your password. The CSG
files can be found in the directory pub/csg.

Two programs of particular interest for MS-DOS machines can be
found in the directory pub/csg/programs/msdos. The file names
are dem1a.exe and dem2a.exe. These are self-extracting files
which provide Bill Powers's demonstrations of the phenomenon of
control and the perceptual control theory model of behavior.
Also of interest is the complete PCT bibliography complied by
Greg Williams. This file can be found in the directory
pub/csg/documents as biblio.pct.

A file in MS-DOS zip format containing the above-mentioned demo
programs as well as others compiled by Dag Forssell is available
as pub/csg/programs/msdos/forssell.zip.

GOPHER AND WORLD WIDE WEB

For Gopher access, point your Gopher at biome.bio.ns.ca. This
can usually done by following the following path (although the
first four steps below may differ depending on how you access
Gopher):

-> Other Gopher and Information Servers
-> North America
-> Canada
-> Bedford Institute of Oceanography (Canada)
-> Organizations
-> Control Systems Group

The exact link is:

Type=1
Name=Control Systems Group
Path=1/FTP/pub/csg
Host=biome.bio.ns.ca
Port=70
URL: gopher://biome.bio.ns.ca:70/11/FTP/pub/csg

which can also be used with World Wide Web.

E-MAIL

Document files and uuencoded versions of program files can also
be obtained via e-mail. Here are some basic commands for
obtaining files and information:

Commands:

     help
     get pub/csg/00index

"help" requests commands and explanations
"get pub/csg/00index" requests index for the csg subdirectory.

Pay attention to letter case for commands! DOS is not dos.
The pub/csg/00index you receive in response will show additional
directories and enable you to send messages to find out what is
available in your area of interest.

                           REFERENCES

Here are some selected books, papers and computer programs on
Perceptual Control Theory. For a complete list of CSG-related
publications, get the file biblio.pct from the fileserver as
described above. A PCT RESOURCE GUIDE with more detailed
information is available by sending a self-addressed, stamped
envelope (or address and two reply coupons for international
postage) to Purposeful Leadership. (Address below). All prices as
of April, 1994.

                         * * * * * * * *

Cziko, Gary A. (1992). Purposeful behavior as the control of
  perception: Implications for educational research. EDUCATIONAL
  RESEARCHER, 21(9), 10-18, 27. Back issue $9. Publication
  office: Washington DC. (202) 223-9485.

Cziko, Gary A. (1992). Perceptual control theory: One threat to
  educational research not (yet?) faced by Amundson, Serlin, and
  Lehrer. EDUCATIONAL RESEARCHER, 21(9), 25-27. Response to
  critics of previous article.

Ford, Edward E. (1989). FREEDOM FROM STRESS. Scottsdale AZ:
  Brandt Publishing. PCT in a comprehensive counseling story.
  See order form.

Ford, Edward E. (1987). LOVE GUARANTEED. Scottsdale AZ:
  Brandt Publishing. PCT in marriage counseling. See order form.

Forssell, Dag C., (1993). Perceptual Control: A New Management
  Insight." In ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 5(4), 17-25.
  See order form: introduction book.

Forssell, Dag C. (Ed.), (1994). PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY: DOS
  COMPUTER DEMONSTRATION, TUTORIALS, SIMULATIONS, EXPLANATIONS.
  1.44 MB 3 1/2" disk (1 ea) or 1.2 MB 5 1/4" disk (2 ea). May
  be freely copied. See order form.

Forssell, Dag C., (1994). PERCEPTUAL CONTROL: USEFUL MANAGEMENT
  INSIGHT. Structure and evidence for HPCT, with application
  to conflict resolution. See order form: Introduction book.

Forssell, Dag C., (1994). PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORY: THE ACHILLES'
  HEEL OF TQM. ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT JOURNAL. Defining useful
  theory and assessing TQM. See order form: Introduction book.

Gibbons, Hugh. (1990). THE DEATH OF JEFFREY STAPLETON: EXPLORING
  THE WAY LAWYERS THINK. Concord, NH: Franklin Pierce Law Center.
  Using PCT to explain how lawyers think. Send $10 to
  Hugh Gibbons, Professor, Franklin Pierce Law Center,
  Concord, NH, 03301.

Hershberger, Wayne. (Ed.). (1989). VOLITIONAL ACTION: CONATION
  AND CONTROL (Advances in Psychology No. 62). NY: North-Holland
  (Elsevier). 25 articles (not all PCT). See order form.

Marken, Richard S. (Ed.). (1990). Purposeful Behavior: The
  control theory approach. AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST, 34(1).
  (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications) 11 articles on
  control theory. See order form.

Marken, Richard S. (1992). MIND READINGS: EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES
  OF PURPOSE. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($18 postpaid)
  Research papers exploring control. See order form.

McClelland, Kent. (In press). Perceptual Control and Social
  Power. SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES. 24 pages. In press: December
  1994. Send $5 to: Kent McClelland, Professor, Dept. of
  Sociology, Grinnell College, Grinnell, IA, 50112.

McPhail, Clark. (1990). THE MYTH OF THE MADDING CROWD. New York:
  Aldine de Gruyter. Introduces control theory to explain group
  behavior. See order form.

McPhail, Clark., Powers, William T., & Tucker, Charles W. (1992).
  Simulating individual and collective action In temporary
  gatherings. SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW, 10(1), 1-28.
  Computer simulation of control systems in groups. Duke
  University Press: Box 90660, Durham, NC. (919) 687-3600.

Petrie, Hugh G. (1981). THE DILEMMA OF INQUIRY AND LEARNING.
  Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Out of print.

Powers, William T. (1973). BEHAVIOR: THE CONTROL OF PERCEPTION.
  Hawthorne, NY: Aldine DeGruyter. The basic text. See order form.

Powers, William T. (1989). LIVING CONTROL SYSTEMS: SELECTED
  PAPERS. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. Previously published
  papers, 1960-1988. See order form.

Powers, William T. (1992). LIVING CONTROL SYSTEMS II: SELECTED
  PAPERS. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books.Previously unpublished
  papers, 1959-1990. See order form.

Richardson, George P. (1991). FEEDBACK THOUGHT IN SOCIAL SCIENCE
  AND SYSTEMS THEORY. A review of systems thinking, including PCT.
  (Paperback $19.95) ISBN 0-8122-1332-7 University of
  Pennsylvania Press. (800) 445-9880.

Robertson, Richard J. and Powers, William T. (Eds.). (1990).
  INTRODUCTION TO MODERN PSYCHOLOGY: THE CONTROL THEORY VIEW.
  Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Book. College-level text. See order form.

Runkel, Philip J. (1990). CASTING NETS AND TESTING SPECIMENS.
  When statistics are appropriate; when models are required.
  With explanation of PCT. Clothbound, $45. Order code: C3533
  Praeger Publishers, P.O. Box 5007, Westport, CT 06881
  Phone: (800) 225-5800, (203) 226-3571, Fax (203) 222-1502.

                         * * * * * * * *

Order forms copied from the PCT resource guide:

···

To: SERVER@BIOME.BIO.NS.CA
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
CSG Book Publishing: Greg Williams Phone: (606) 332-7606
460 Black Lick Road, Gravel Switch, KY 40328 USA

___ ea INTRODUCTION TO MODERN PSYCHOLOGY @ $25.00 _______
___ ea LIVING CONTROL SYSTEMS @ $16.50 _______
___ ea LIVING CONTROL SYSTEMS II @ $22.00 _______
___ ea MIND READINGS @ $18.00 _______
       Kentucky residents please add sales tax Tax _______
       Shipping & Handling (world wide) per order _5.00__
       Prepaid: Check, money order total _______

NAME ___________________________________Phone(______)_______-__________

ADDRESS _______________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Purposeful Leadership: Dag Forssell Phone: (805) 254-1195
23903 Via Flamenco, Valencia, CA 91355-2808 USA Fax: (805) 254-7956

___ ea Articles & Program Info. Introduction book @ $20.00 _______
___ ea PCTdemos. DOS program disk __ 31/2" __5 1/4" @ $10.00 _______
___ ea Rubber Band Demo. Video & Script 63 minutes @ $20.00 _______
___ ea PCT supports TQM. Video 117 minutes @ $20.00 _______
___ ea Deming-Observ., Interpret., Comment. Booklet @ $10.00 _______
___ ea Freedom From Stress. Book by Ed Ford @ $10.00 _______
       California residents please add sales tax Tax _______
       Shipping & Handling (world wide) per order _5.00__
       Prepaid: Check, money order total _______

NAME ___________________________________Phone(______)_______-__________

ADDRESS _______________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Brandt Publishing: Edward E. Ford Phone & Fax: (602) 991-4860
10209 North 56th Street, Scottsdale, AZ 85253-1130 USA

___ ea Freedom From Stress, Book @ $10.00 _______
___ ea Love Guaranteed, Book @ $ 9.00 _______
___ ea Love Guaranteed, Video @ $20.00 _______
___ ea Discipline for Home and School, Book (July 94) @ $10.00 _______
       Arizona residents please add sales tax Tax _______
       Shipping & Handling (world wide) per order _5.00__
       Prepaid: Check, money order total _______

NAME ___________________________________Phone(______)_______-__________

ADDRESS _______________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Journal Marketing, Sage Publications Phone orders: (805) 499-0721
2455 Teller Rd, Newbury Park, CA 91320 USA Fax: (805) 499-0871

       American Behavioral Scientist, Volume 34, Number 1 Sept/Oct 1990
       Stock number 201238 Richard S. Marken, Editor
       Purposeful Behavior; The Control Theory Approach,
___ ea Price for individuals and companies: @ $11.20 _______
___ ea Price for institutions and libraries: @ $22.40 _______
       California residents add sales tax 7.25% Tax _______
       Shipping & Handling (world wide) per order _2.00__
       Prepaid: Check, money order, credit cards total _______

NAME ___________________________________Phone(______)_______-__________

ADDRESS _______________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Elsevier Science Phone orders: (212) 633-3650
655 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10010 USA Fax: (212) 633-3680

___ ea Volitional Action, Conation and Control, W.A. Hershberger, Ed.
       ISBN: 0-444-88318-5 @ $155.50 _______
       New York residents add sales tax Tax _______
       Shipping included with prepaid orders _______
       Check, money order, credit cards, P.O's Total _______

NAME ___________________________________Phone(______)_______-__________

ADDRESS _______________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Aldine de Gruyter Phone orders: (914) 747-0110
200 Saw Mill River Road, Hawthorne, NY 10532 USA Fax: (914) 747-1326

___ ea Behavior: The Control of Perception by William T. Powers
       Clothbound ISBN 0-202-25113-6 @ $41.95 _______
       The Myth of the Madding Crowd by Clark McPhail
___ ea Clothbound ISBN 0-202-30424-8 @ $47.95 _______
___ ea Paperbound ISBN 0-202-30375-6 @ $24.95 _______
       New York residents add sales tax Tax _______
       Shipping: $4 for first book, $1 per additional _______
       Check, money order, credit cards Total _______

NAME ___________________________________Phone(______)_______-__________

ADDRESS _______________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

INTRODUCTION TO THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP NETWORK (CSGnet)
             AND TO THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP
             Prepared by Dag Forssell 921118.

This introduction provides information about:

   Our subject: Perceptual Control Theory
   The evolution of the control paradigm
   Demonstrating the Phenomenon of Control
   The purpose of CSGnet
   CSGnet participants
   Asking questions
   The Control Systems Group
   Subscribing to CSGnet
   How to obtain text and program files
   Literature references

OUR SUBJECT: PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY

Here are two introductions by Bill and Mary Powers:

  There have been two paradigms in the behavioral sciences since
  the 1600's. One was the idea that events impinging on
  organisms make them behave as they do. The other, which was
  developed in the 1930's, is PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY (PCT).
  Perceptual Control Theory explains how organisms control what
  happens to them. This means all organisms from the amoeba to
  humankind. It explains why one organism can't control another
  without physical violence. It explains why people deprived of
  any major part of their ability to control soon become
  dysfunctional, lose interest in life, pine away and die. It
  explains what a goal is, how goals relate to action, how
  action affects perceptions and how perceptions define the
  reality in which we live and move and have our being.
  Perceptual Control Theory is the first scientific theory that
  can handle all these phenomena within a single, testable
  concept of how living systems work.

                      William T. Powers, November 3, 1991

  PERCEPTUAL CONTROL THEORY

  While the existence of control mechanisms and processes (such
  as feedback) in living systems is generally recognized, the
  implications of control organization go far beyond what is
  generally accepted. We believe that a fundamental
  characteristic of organisms is their ability to control; that
  they are, in fact, living control systems. To distinguish this
  approach from others using some version of control theory but
  forcing it to fit conventional approaches, we call ours
  Perceptual Control Theory, or PCT.

  PCT requires a major shift in thinking from the traditional
  approach: that what is controlled is not behavior, but
  perception. Modelling behavior as a dependent variable, as a
  response to stimuli, provides no explanation for the
  phenomenon of achieving consistent ends through varying means,
  and requires an extensive use of statistics to achieve modest
  (to the point of meaningless) correlations. Attempts to model
  behavior as planned and computed output can be demonstrated to
  require levels of precise calculation that are unobtainable in
  a physical system, and impossible in a real environment that
  is changing from one moment to the next. The PCT model views
  behavior as the means by which a perceived state of affairs is
  brought to and maintained at a reference state. This approach
  provides a physically plausible explanation for the
  consistency of outcomes and the variability of means.

  The PCT model has been used to simulate phenomena as diverse
  as bacterial chemotaxis, tracking a target, and behavior in
  crowds. In its elaborated form, a hierarchy of perceptual
  control systems (HPCT), it has lent itself to a computer
  simulation of tracking, including learning to track, and to
  new approaches to education, management, and psychotherapy.

  Control systems are not new in the life sciences. However,
  numerous misapprehensions exist, passed down from what was
  learned about control theory by non-engineers 40 or 50 years
  ago without further reference to newer developments or
  correction of initial misunderstandings. References in the
  literature to the desirability of positive feedback and the
  assertion that systems with feedback are slower than S-R
  systems are simply false, and concerns about stability are
  unfounded.

  The primary barrier to the adoption of PCT concepts is the
  belief - or hope - that control theory can simply be absorbed
  into the mainstream life sciences without disturbing the
  status quo. It is very hard to believe that one's training and
  life work, and that of one's mentors, and their mentors, must
  be fundamentally revised. Therefore, PCT appeals to those who
  feel some dissatisfaction with the status quo, or who are
  attracted to the idea of a generative model with broad
  application throughout the life sciences (plus AI and
  robotics). There are very few people working in PCT research.
  Much of its promise is still simply promise, and it meets
  resistance from all sides. It is frustrating but also
  tremendously exciting to be a part of the group who believe
  that they are participating in the birth of a true science of
  life.
                        Mary Powers, November 1992

THE EVOLUTION OF THE CONTROL PARADIGM

The PCT paradigm originates in 1927, when an engineer named
Harold Black invented the negative feedback amplifier, which is
a control device. This invention led to the development of
purposeful machines. Purposeful machines have built-in intent to
achieve consistent ends by variable means under changing
conditions.

The discovery and formalization of the phenomenon of control is
the first alternative to the cause-effect perspective ever
proposed in any science.

The first discussion of purposeful machines and people came in
1943 in a paper called: Behavior, Purpose and Teleology by
Rosenblueth, Wiener and Bigelow. This paper also argued that
purpose belongs in science as a real phenomenon in the present.
Purpose does not mean that somehow the future influences the
present.

The first specific suggestion on how to use the concept of
control to understand people came in 1957 in a paper entitled:
A General Feedback Theory of Human Behavior by McFarland, Powers
and Clark.

In 1973 William T. (Bill) Powers published a seminal book called
"Behavior: the Control of Perception," which still is the major
reference for PCT. See literature below.

This book spells out a complete model of how the human brain and
nervous system works like a living perceptual control system.
Our brain can be viewed as a system that controls its own
perceptions. This view suggests explanations for many previously
mysterious aspects of how people interact with their world.

Perceptual Control Theory has been accepted by independently
thinking psychologists, scientists and other interested people.
The result is that an association has been formed (the Control
System Group), several books published, this CSGnet set up and
that at latest count 16 professors are teaching PCT in American
universities today.

DEMONSTRATING THE PHENOMENON OF CONTROL

The phenomenon of control is largely unrecognized in science
today. It is not well understood in important aspects even by
many control engineers. Yet the phenomenon of control, when it
is recognized and understood, provides a powerful enhancement to
scientific perspectives.

It is essential to recognize that this phenomenon exists and
deserves an explanation before any of the discourse on CSGnet
will make sense.

Please download the introductory demonstration dem1a.exe, which
is an interactive program and/or rubberbd.txt, which is a text
telling you how to demonstrate the phenomenon to yourself and a
friend using only two rubber bands.

THE PURPOSE OF CSGnet:

CSGnet provides a forum for development, use and testing of PCT.

CSGnet PARTICIPANTS

Many interests and backgrounds are represented here. Psychology,
Sociology, Linguistics, Artificial Intelligence, Robotics,
Social Work, Neurology, Modeling and Testing. All are
represented and discussed. As of December 1992 there were
over 130 individuals from 18 countries subscribed to CSGnet.

ASKING QUESTIONS

Please introduce yourself with a statement of your professional
interests and background. It will help someone answer if you
spell out which demonstrations, introductory papers and
references you have taken the time to digest.

THE CONTROL SYSTEMS GROUP

The CSG is an organization of people in the behavioral, social,
and life sciences who see the potential in PCT for increased
understanding in their own fields and for the unification of
diverse and fragmented specialties.

Annual dues are $45 for full members and $5 for students
(subsidized).

An annual meeting is held in Durango, Colorado, on the campus of
Fort Lewis College. In 1993 it will begin in the evening of
Wednesday, July 28, and end Sunday morning, Aug, 1. There will
be 7 plenary meetings (mornings and evenings), with afternoons,
mealtimes, and late night free for further discussion or
recreation. Full details will be available on the net or by mail
after April 1, 1993.

Net subscribers find it useful to have thematic collections of
some of the network discussions, and it enables non-net members
to keep up with them. Threads from this net are published on a
quarterly basis in a booklet called the Closed Loop. These
booklets are distributed to members and are available
separately. A complimentary copy of Closed Loop will be sent
upon request. Back issues are available: Volume 1 (4 issues) is
$12. Single issues of Volume 2, beginning with Jan. 1992, are $6
each.

For membership information and back issues of Closed Loop,
write: CSG, c/o Mary Powers, 73 Ridge Place CR 510, Durango, CO
81301-8136.

SUBSCRIBING TO CSGnet

When you subscribe to CSGnet, you get this message,
CSGINTRO.DOC. But you may have received it from a friend who
printed it, seen it on a demodisk, or seen it on Usenet. To
subscribe, send a message as follows: (Internet address followed
by two message commands, one per line)

  LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
  Subscribe CSG-L Lastname, Firstname, Affiliation, City, State.
  help

(Lastname, Firstname, etc is optional commentary, but helpful).
("help" requests a list of most commonly used commands).
(The Bitnet address is: LISTSERV@UIUCVMD).
(This server is not sensitive to upper or lower case letters).

CSGnet can also be accessed via Usenet (NetNews) where it is
listed as the newsgroup bit.listserv.csg-l.

For more information about accessing CSGnet, contact Gary Cziko,
the network manager, at G-CZIKO@UIUC.EDU

HOW TO OBTAIN TEXT AND PROGRAM FILES

A number of ASCII documents and binary computer programs are
available on a fileserver maintained by Bill Silvert. It is
possible to download all these files via e-mail. If you are on
internet, it is easiest to obtain binary program files via
anonymous FTP. If you are on MCI mail, you have read about how
you can transfer binary files with Kermit or Zmodem protocols.
(Type help at the MCI mail prompt for directions). But the
server cannot send binary files over the internet mail network,
so download uue.scr first, then request the binary files
uuencoded as ASCII files. The Internet address for the server is
BIOME.BIO.NS.CA. CSGnet files are kept in the subdirectory
pub/csg.

To get basic information and a current listing of available
documents, send a message as follows: (Internet)

Commands: help
            ftp
            get csg/Index
            end

"help" requests commands and explanations.
"ftp" asks details on anonymous FTP for internet.
"get csg/Index" requests the Index for the csg subdirectory.

Pay attention to letter case for commands! DOS is not dos.

As part of the index (of the csg directory), you may be looking
at:

programs/msdos:
dem1a.exe 128437 Bill Power's demonstr of perceptual control
dem2a.exe 123649 Bill Power's modelling of control

documents/forssell:
uud.scr 53406 ASCII Compile uud.exe w DOS debug Dir @ end.

If you want dem1a.exe (uuencoded) to get a "live" demonstration
of the phenomenon of control, and the ASCII file uud.scr with
directions at the end on how to use DOS debug to compile uud.exe
to decode it, send the following message commands:

uue csg/programs/msdos/dem1a.exe
get csg/programs/forssell/uud.scr

The uuencoded dem1a.exe will be sent in four parts. Remove
headers and use an editor to make it into one file (starting
with table and ending with end) before you use uud.exe to
restore the file. dem1a.exe is a self-extracting archive file.
Put it in it's own directory before you execute it. You get
complete documentation and a running program.

LITERATURE REFERENCES

For a complete list of CSG-related publications, get the file
biblio.pct from the fileserver as described above. Here are some
selected books and papers on Perceptual Control Theory:

Powers, William T. (1973). _Behavior: The control of
perception_. Hawthorne, NY: Aldine DeGruyter.
     The basic text.

*Robertson, Richard J. and Powers, William T. (Eds.). (1990).
_Introduction to modern psychology: The control theory view_.
Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Book. ($25 postpaid)
     College-level text.

*Powers, William T. (1989). _Living control systems: Selected
papers_. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($16.50 postpaid)
     Previously published papers, 1960-1988.

*Powers, William T. (1992). _Living control systems II: Selected
papers_. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($22 postpaid)
     Previously unpublished papers, 1959-1990.

*Marken, Richard S. (1992). _Mind readings: Experimental studies
of purpose_. Gravel Switch, KY: CSG Books. ($18 postpaid)
     Research papers exploring control.

Marken, Richard S. (Ed.). (1990). Purposeful Behavior: The
control theory approach. _American Behavioral Scientist_,
_34_(1). (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications)
     11 articles on control theory.

Runkel, Philip J. (1990). _Casting nets and testing specimens_.
New York: Praeger.
     When statistics are appropriate; when models are required.

Hershberger, Wayne. (Ed.). (1989). _Volitional action: Conation
and control_ (Advances in Psychology No. 62). NY: North-Holland.
     25 articles (not all PCT)

Ford, Edward E. (1989). _Freedom from stress_. Scottsdale AZ:
Brandt Publishing.
     A self-help book. PCT in a counseling framework.

Gibbons, Hugh. (1990). _The death of Jeffrey Stapleton:
Exploring the way lawyers think_. Concord, NH: Franklin Pierce
Law Center.
     A text for law students using control theory.

McClelland, Kent. (1992). _Perceptual control and sociological
theory_. Not yet published. Available from the author,
         Grinnell University, Grinnell, Iowa.

McPhail, Clark. (1990). _The myth of the madding crowd_.
New York: Aldine de Gruyter.
     Introduces control theory to explain group behavior.

McPhail, Clark., Powers, William T., & Tucker, Charles W.
(1992). Simulating individual and collective action In temporary
gatherings. _Social Science Computer Review_, _10_(1), 1-28.
     Computer simulation of control systems in groups.

Petrie, Hugh G. (1981). _The dilemma of inquiry and learning_.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
     Introduces PCT to educational theory.

Richardson, George P. (1991). _Feedback thought in social
science and systems theory_. Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Press.
     A review of systems thinking, including PCT.

*These items are available from CSG Books, 460 Black Lick Road,
  Gravel Switch, KY, 40328.

···

To: SERVER@BIOME.BIO.NS.CA.