
AI Magazine - Intelligent and Mobile Agents Research Group
... supply chain, connected living room, and personal assistants. Such systems understand not just words, but intentions and the context of the interaction. Such architectures are expected to dramatically improve the quality of proactive decision support provided by virtual agents by enabling them to se ...
... supply chain, connected living room, and personal assistants. Such systems understand not just words, but intentions and the context of the interaction. Such architectures are expected to dramatically improve the quality of proactive decision support provided by virtual agents by enabling them to se ...
Pdf - Text of NPTEL IIT Video Lectures
... And the type of actuators we can have or we can build into a robot are wheels, speakers, lights, grippers and any other output device that we may want to. And then we can look at a software agent. The software agent is becoming increasingly common now-a-days. So many people call them softbots. These ...
... And the type of actuators we can have or we can build into a robot are wheels, speakers, lights, grippers and any other output device that we may want to. And then we can look at a software agent. The software agent is becoming increasingly common now-a-days. So many people call them softbots. These ...
Connecting Conscious and Unconscious - Axel Cleeremans
... The conjunction of these two features renders the entire approach incapable of accounting for unconscious cognition, for it entails that representations cannot influence processing independently of being accessed (activated, manipulated) by the processor. However, this property—causal influence with ...
... The conjunction of these two features renders the entire approach incapable of accounting for unconscious cognition, for it entails that representations cannot influence processing independently of being accessed (activated, manipulated) by the processor. However, this property—causal influence with ...
Agent Computing and Situation Aware
... their relations are modeled. Different notions of strong and weak agency are presented at (Wooldridge and Jennings, 1995). (Velde and Perram, 1996) distinguished big and small agents. To apply agent computing with intelligent multimedia some specific roles and models have to be presented for agents. ...
... their relations are modeled. Different notions of strong and weak agency are presented at (Wooldridge and Jennings, 1995). (Velde and Perram, 1996) distinguished big and small agents. To apply agent computing with intelligent multimedia some specific roles and models have to be presented for agents. ...
A Discount Approach to the Semantic Web
... cognitive cost [11] and widespread appeal. Nonetheless, there is considerable discussion about the failings of the free–text tag. Each individual — either alone or within a community — tag in an individualised way (a clue as to the underlying mechanisms can be found in experiments such as the work r ...
... cognitive cost [11] and widespread appeal. Nonetheless, there is considerable discussion about the failings of the free–text tag. Each individual — either alone or within a community — tag in an individualised way (a clue as to the underlying mechanisms can be found in experiments such as the work r ...
alphabet of human thought
... symbols are actually connected to the things they refer to?) o N get our information through our senses about facts in the world which we are know are true make new inferences from these facts about the world inferneces make us take action to get more information so if our SENSES determine our f ...
... symbols are actually connected to the things they refer to?) o N get our information through our senses about facts in the world which we are know are true make new inferences from these facts about the world inferneces make us take action to get more information so if our SENSES determine our f ...
Understanding and Interpreting the Activities of Experts: a Cognitive
... To achieve a robust interpretation of activities, the interaction of visual attention, active camera beha recognition, understanding, and knowledge from models, tasks, and context are being investigated. interaction of these modules is the essential mechanism for removing possible ambiguities from t ...
... To achieve a robust interpretation of activities, the interaction of visual attention, active camera beha recognition, understanding, and knowledge from models, tasks, and context are being investigated. interaction of these modules is the essential mechanism for removing possible ambiguities from t ...
Intelligent Agent Technology and Application
... 1st Week Course overview and what is intelligent agent 2nd Week Negotiation in MAS(i) 3rd Week Negotiation in MAS(ii) 4th Week Agent learning (i) 5th Week Agent learning (ii) 6th Week Agent communication language 7th Week Application: RoboCup, Trading Agent ...
... 1st Week Course overview and what is intelligent agent 2nd Week Negotiation in MAS(i) 3rd Week Negotiation in MAS(ii) 4th Week Agent learning (i) 5th Week Agent learning (ii) 6th Week Agent communication language 7th Week Application: RoboCup, Trading Agent ...
Intelligent Agent Technology and Application
... 1st Week Course overview and what is intelligent agent 2nd Week Negotiation in MAS(i) 3rd Week Negotiation in MAS(ii) 4th Week Agent learning (i) 5th Week Agent learning (ii) 6th Week Agent communication language 7th Week Application: RoboCup, Trading Agent ...
... 1st Week Course overview and what is intelligent agent 2nd Week Negotiation in MAS(i) 3rd Week Negotiation in MAS(ii) 4th Week Agent learning (i) 5th Week Agent learning (ii) 6th Week Agent communication language 7th Week Application: RoboCup, Trading Agent ...
Learning Distinctions and Rules in a Continuous World through
... Drescher [1991] proposed a model of contingencies inspired by Piaget, he refers to contingencies as schemas and he finds these schemas by a process called marginal attribution. Marginal attribution first finds results that follow actions in a method similar to Watson’s prospective probabilities. The ...
... Drescher [1991] proposed a model of contingencies inspired by Piaget, he refers to contingencies as schemas and he finds these schemas by a process called marginal attribution. Marginal attribution first finds results that follow actions in a method similar to Watson’s prospective probabilities. The ...
Using Sentence-Level LSTM Language Models for Script Inference
... X Y Z, only X is provided as input. We also present results for systems of the form a X Y , which signifies that the system is trained to decode Y from X with the addition of an attention mechanism. We use the attention mechanism of Vinyals et al. (2015). In short, these models have additional ...
... X Y Z, only X is provided as input. We also present results for systems of the form a X Y , which signifies that the system is trained to decode Y from X with the addition of an attention mechanism. We use the attention mechanism of Vinyals et al. (2015). In short, these models have additional ...
View PDF - Advances in Cognitive Systems
... This view contrasts with the dominant trend in artificial intelligence and cognitive science, which is to identify and investigate individual cognitive constructs and functional capabilities. Research on specific components is important to advancing cognitive systems, because individual capabilities ...
... This view contrasts with the dominant trend in artificial intelligence and cognitive science, which is to identify and investigate individual cognitive constructs and functional capabilities. Research on specific components is important to advancing cognitive systems, because individual capabilities ...
Intentional Embodied Agents
... in two manners. Firstly by the agent itself, reactive mutation/migration, or secondly by the enveloping environment based upon agent activity, proactive mutation/migration. The key to this system is the method whereby the agents can migrate between the various information spaces. Agents should be ca ...
... in two manners. Firstly by the agent itself, reactive mutation/migration, or secondly by the enveloping environment based upon agent activity, proactive mutation/migration. The key to this system is the method whereby the agents can migrate between the various information spaces. Agents should be ca ...
cognitive artefact
... Symbolic cognitive artefacts canonically support conceptual and symbolic processes in specific meaning domains Examples: notational systems, dials, calendars, compasses Cultural and cognitive schemas organizing e.g. time and number can be considered as dependent on, and hence constituted, not just e ...
... Symbolic cognitive artefacts canonically support conceptual and symbolic processes in specific meaning domains Examples: notational systems, dials, calendars, compasses Cultural and cognitive schemas organizing e.g. time and number can be considered as dependent on, and hence constituted, not just e ...
Complex Systems and Health Behavior Change
... Cognitive science is the study of the mind as an information-processing system. Borrowing heavily from computer science, psychology, anthropology, artificial intelligence, linguistics, philosophy and neuroscience, this discipline has yield benefit over the past 60 years.7,8 Computational modeling an ...
... Cognitive science is the study of the mind as an information-processing system. Borrowing heavily from computer science, psychology, anthropology, artificial intelligence, linguistics, philosophy and neuroscience, this discipline has yield benefit over the past 60 years.7,8 Computational modeling an ...
Animal Behavior : Ethology
... Evolutionary link to Behavior • Animals are expected to behave in ways to maximize their fitness (optimum behavior) • What is the genetic influence? • Ex. Lovebirds a repertoire of song types • Why has natural selection favored multisong behavior? • Poss hypothesis: A repertoire of songs makes olde ...
... Evolutionary link to Behavior • Animals are expected to behave in ways to maximize their fitness (optimum behavior) • What is the genetic influence? • Ex. Lovebirds a repertoire of song types • Why has natural selection favored multisong behavior? • Poss hypothesis: A repertoire of songs makes olde ...
Artificial Intelligence and Artificial Consciousness
... Intrinsic moral worth (IMW) • Another possible source of discontinuity between cognitive and phenomenological? • Perhaps any genuine AC would have to be considered as having its own intrinsic experiential point of view, and hence an intrinsic moral worth; • i.e. it would deserve consideration for i ...
... Intrinsic moral worth (IMW) • Another possible source of discontinuity between cognitive and phenomenological? • Perhaps any genuine AC would have to be considered as having its own intrinsic experiential point of view, and hence an intrinsic moral worth; • i.e. it would deserve consideration for i ...
is function OF - Association for Contextual Behavioral Science
... => different techniques can be used by different people with different aims => each approach adds techniques but retains old ones for new aims 2. “BT as S-S” part of CBT compatible with “BT functional analysis” but not “BT as S-R” => historically, this has been a false debate 3. “CBT functional anal ...
... => different techniques can be used by different people with different aims => each approach adds techniques but retains old ones for new aims 2. “BT as S-S” part of CBT compatible with “BT functional analysis” but not “BT as S-R” => historically, this has been a false debate 3. “CBT functional anal ...
Claims and Challenges in Evaluating Human
... of the art in HLI systems. Over fifty years ago, Turing (1950) tried to finesse the issue of defining HLI by creating a test that involved comparison to human behavior, the Turing Test. In this test, no analysis of the components of intelligence was necessary; the only question was whether or not a ...
... of the art in HLI systems. Over fifty years ago, Turing (1950) tried to finesse the issue of defining HLI by creating a test that involved comparison to human behavior, the Turing Test. In this test, no analysis of the components of intelligence was necessary; the only question was whether or not a ...
Intelligent Agent Technology and Application
... inhabit some complex dynamic environment, sense and act autonomously in this environment, and by doing so realize a set of goals or tasks for which they are designed”. ...
... inhabit some complex dynamic environment, sense and act autonomously in this environment, and by doing so realize a set of goals or tasks for which they are designed”. ...
The Behavior-Oriented Design of Modular Agent Intelligence
... At roughly the same time as BBAI was emerging, so were reactive plans [16, 20]. Reactive plans are powerful plan representations that provide for robust execution. A single plan will work under many different contingencies given a sufficiently amenable context. An agent can store a number of such pl ...
... At roughly the same time as BBAI was emerging, so were reactive plans [16, 20]. Reactive plans are powerful plan representations that provide for robust execution. A single plan will work under many different contingencies given a sufficiently amenable context. An agent can store a number of such pl ...
New Frontier in Informatics and Systems
... many intermixed signals is the key to highperformance digital communications. ...
... many intermixed signals is the key to highperformance digital communications. ...
pdf file
... organisation, on the other hand, should be sufficiently expressive; executability, however, is not required for such a language. What is important, though, is that properties specified in such a language can be checked for a given sample behaviour (e.g., a simulation run) without much work, preferab ...
... organisation, on the other hand, should be sufficiently expressive; executability, however, is not required for such a language. What is important, though, is that properties specified in such a language can be checked for a given sample behaviour (e.g., a simulation run) without much work, preferab ...
Cross-Paradigm Analysis of Autonomous Agent Architecture
... from a much more dynamic process. It has been argued (by e.g. Vereijken and Whiting, 1998; van Gelder, 1998; Hendriks-Jansen, 1996; Goldfield, 1995; Maes, 1991b) that hierarchical strategies of action selection necessarily lead to rigid, brittle systems incapable of reacting quickly and opportunisti ...
... from a much more dynamic process. It has been argued (by e.g. Vereijken and Whiting, 1998; van Gelder, 1998; Hendriks-Jansen, 1996; Goldfield, 1995; Maes, 1991b) that hierarchical strategies of action selection necessarily lead to rigid, brittle systems incapable of reacting quickly and opportunisti ...