Recent findings in brain imaging, particularly in fMRI, are beginning to reveal some of the fundamental properties
of the organization of the cortical systems that underpin complex cognition. We propose an emerging set
of operating principles that govern this organization, characterizing the system as a set of collaborating cortical
centers that operate as a large-scale cortical network. Two of the network’s critical features are that it is resource
constrained and dynamically configured, with resource constraints and demands dynamically shaping the network
topology. The operating principles are embodied in a cognitive neuroarchitecture, 4CAPS, consisting of a number
of interacting computational centers that correspond to activating cortical areas. Each 4CAPS center is a hybrid
production system, possessing both symbolic and connectionist attributes. We describe 4CAPS models of sentence
comprehension, spatial problem solving, and complex multitasking and compare the accounts of these models with
brain activation and behavioral results. Finally, we compare 4CAPS with other proposed neuroarchitectures.