![Machine Consciousness: A Modern Approach](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/002738605_1-2a3061dd27857cca9136b8d88d96f4e6-300x300.png)
Machine Consciousness: A Modern Approach
... it, “Most roboticists are more than happy to leave these debates on consciousness to those with more philosophical leanings” (Arkin 1998). Either because consciousness has no practical consequences or because it is a false problem, these group of authors prefer to focus on more defined issues (visio ...
... it, “Most roboticists are more than happy to leave these debates on consciousness to those with more philosophical leanings” (Arkin 1998). Either because consciousness has no practical consequences or because it is a false problem, these group of authors prefer to focus on more defined issues (visio ...
doc - John L. Pollock
... for which we have the better reason wins. Second, the reliability of an inference scheme can vary in different circumstances. For instance, in humans color vision is pretty reliable, but not when things are illuminated by colored lights. This is something that we discover inductively, and we can us ...
... for which we have the better reason wins. Second, the reliability of an inference scheme can vary in different circumstances. For instance, in humans color vision is pretty reliable, but not when things are illuminated by colored lights. This is something that we discover inductively, and we can us ...
Mirroring others` emotions relates to empathy and
... in adults, it may be valuable to extend this investigation to a developmental population. What about the more general hypothesis that MNS may also play a significant role in social cognition? This issue remains rather controversial in the field. Some have championed a simulation theory of ‘mind read ...
... in adults, it may be valuable to extend this investigation to a developmental population. What about the more general hypothesis that MNS may also play a significant role in social cognition? This issue remains rather controversial in the field. Some have championed a simulation theory of ‘mind read ...
TALK OF SAYING, SHOWING, GESTURING, AND FEELING IN
... establishing any institutionalized forms of life, with their associated orderly language games, what we just do, unselfconsciously and spontaneously, provides the creative grounds within which such forms can grow. As he suggests: ‘The origin and the primitive form of the language game is a reaction; ...
... establishing any institutionalized forms of life, with their associated orderly language games, what we just do, unselfconsciously and spontaneously, provides the creative grounds within which such forms can grow. As he suggests: ‘The origin and the primitive form of the language game is a reaction; ...
the fragility of consciousness: lonergan and the postmodern concern
... In order to understand the modern turn to the subject, we must grasp what is most crucially distinctive about modern in contrast to premodern reflection on human being. It is not that premodern philosophers had not distinguished clearly the human from all other species of being, for they were admira ...
... In order to understand the modern turn to the subject, we must grasp what is most crucially distinctive about modern in contrast to premodern reflection on human being. It is not that premodern philosophers had not distinguished clearly the human from all other species of being, for they were admira ...
Learning in multi-agent systems
... experience of the world was no longer relevant. Thus, in deciding whether or not to build a capacity for social learning into a group of software agents, we should first examine the speed at which their environment changes. 4.2.1 Mechanisms for social learning Turning to the question of mechanism: t ...
... experience of the world was no longer relevant. Thus, in deciding whether or not to build a capacity for social learning into a group of software agents, we should first examine the speed at which their environment changes. 4.2.1 Mechanisms for social learning Turning to the question of mechanism: t ...
session02
... • PAGE (Percepts, Actions, Goals, Environment) • Task-specific & specialized: well-defined goals and environment • The notion of an agent is meant to be a tool for analyzing systems, • It is not a different hardware or new programming languages ...
... • PAGE (Percepts, Actions, Goals, Environment) • Task-specific & specialized: well-defined goals and environment • The notion of an agent is meant to be a tool for analyzing systems, • It is not a different hardware or new programming languages ...
From Who am I to When am I?: Framing the Time and Shape of the
... forecasts; instead they are the fodder that helps make the future in itself problematic. As with the case of the question of the core of futures studies, we might ask: is this an appropriate metaphor? If so, is it a nuclear core on the verge of a theoretical meltdown or an apple core whose seeds sho ...
... forecasts; instead they are the fodder that helps make the future in itself problematic. As with the case of the question of the core of futures studies, we might ask: is this an appropriate metaphor? If so, is it a nuclear core on the verge of a theoretical meltdown or an apple core whose seeds sho ...
knowledge management in expert systems developement
... In each expert system is embedded in an appropriate manner a large amount of high-quality knowledge of the problems from a certain domains of human activity, (Bosnjak, 2006). Expert system, as an intelligent program, can then process embedded knowledge in order to successfully solve problems from i ...
... In each expert system is embedded in an appropriate manner a large amount of high-quality knowledge of the problems from a certain domains of human activity, (Bosnjak, 2006). Expert system, as an intelligent program, can then process embedded knowledge in order to successfully solve problems from i ...
Automatic Extraction of Efficient Axiom Sets from Large Knowledge
... learning by reading, or knowledge capture systems). In this algorithm, we represent the predicates used in statements that can be produced by external systems by the set LearnablePredicates. If a predicate P belongs to the set LearnablePredicates then ExtractAxioms would include axioms with P in the ...
... learning by reading, or knowledge capture systems). In this algorithm, we represent the predicates used in statements that can be produced by external systems by the set LearnablePredicates. If a predicate P belongs to the set LearnablePredicates then ExtractAxioms would include axioms with P in the ...
A Piagetian Model of Early Sensorimotor Development
... account of a learning mechanism which could account for the development; this would likely require significant input from further psychological studies. (2) Try to work from the abstract theory, taking the main aspects of the theory which make sense, and using our own creativity as AI programmers to ...
... account of a learning mechanism which could account for the development; this would likely require significant input from further psychological studies. (2) Try to work from the abstract theory, taking the main aspects of the theory which make sense, and using our own creativity as AI programmers to ...
Forbidden Knowledge: Public Controversy and the Production of
... the ‘‘flip-side’’ of epistemology, theorizing ignorance as an active production, rather than a simple omission. ...
... the ‘‘flip-side’’ of epistemology, theorizing ignorance as an active production, rather than a simple omission. ...
r o 0 w f n . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 0 w f n . h t m a p r o 0 y 4 4 . h t m
... a p r o 1 z m s . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 1 z m s . h t m a p r o 1 z p 0 . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 1 z p 0 . h t m a p r o 2 2 h x . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 2 2 h x . h t m a p r o 2 3 6 t . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 2 3 6 t . h t m a p r o 2 5 2 j . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 2 5 2 j . h t m a p r o 2 ...
... a p r o 1 z m s . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 1 z m s . h t m a p r o 1 z p 0 . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 1 z p 0 . h t m a p r o 2 2 h x . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 2 2 h x . h t m a p r o 2 3 6 t . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 2 3 6 t . h t m a p r o 2 5 2 j . h t m , I I S _ a p r o 2 5 2 j . h t m a p r o 2 ...
FV Slaby, Haueis, and Choudhury for Routledge - PH
... deliver robust empirical insights into the psychological functioning of human beings, and that these insights will underwrite specific theoretical articulations of our political preferences, capabilities and liabilities, while disconfirming other such articulations. The result, it is assumed, will b ...
... deliver robust empirical insights into the psychological functioning of human beings, and that these insights will underwrite specific theoretical articulations of our political preferences, capabilities and liabilities, while disconfirming other such articulations. The result, it is assumed, will b ...
Dear Virgil
... central question was epistemic. His starting point, however, was man living in real life—the lifeworld. Husserl argues that each person lives in a world, in the natural attitude, as a “human person living among others in the world” (Husserl 1989:411). The world I experience in the natural attitude, ...
... central question was epistemic. His starting point, however, was man living in real life—the lifeworld. Husserl argues that each person lives in a world, in the natural attitude, as a “human person living among others in the world” (Husserl 1989:411). The world I experience in the natural attitude, ...
Relativism and the Ontological Turn within Anthropology1
... of the brain (or Cartesian mind). Rather, objects and bodily actions in the environment are legitimately thought of as parts of the mind, and their use is part of thinking. Shifting beads on an abacus, on this view, is not essentially different from doing sums in one's head. The movement of the bea ...
... of the brain (or Cartesian mind). Rather, objects and bodily actions in the environment are legitimately thought of as parts of the mind, and their use is part of thinking. Shifting beads on an abacus, on this view, is not essentially different from doing sums in one's head. The movement of the bea ...
On Peter Winch and Qualitative Social Research
... rule’. In order for us to use a word correctly, it means that we are using the word the same way as the definition suggests. But what is it for something to be the same as another? For instance, when someone points to a table and says: “this is wood”, how can we know if he is talking about the tabl ...
... rule’. In order for us to use a word correctly, it means that we are using the word the same way as the definition suggests. But what is it for something to be the same as another? For instance, when someone points to a table and says: “this is wood”, how can we know if he is talking about the tabl ...
The role of Artificial Intelligence in Knowledge Management
... supports business processes, 2 papers address technologies for intelligent search agents, 2 papers describe the use of agents in the defense industry, and there is 1 paper on people finder KM systems. Given that up to now, publications on AI in KM are typically biased towards intelligent agents, ont ...
... supports business processes, 2 papers address technologies for intelligent search agents, 2 papers describe the use of agents in the defense industry, and there is 1 paper on people finder KM systems. Given that up to now, publications on AI in KM are typically biased towards intelligent agents, ont ...
extending office systems to manage administrative knowledge
... numerous intelligent applications have been developed, the emphasis has been on applying existing techniques in new areas (see for example [6]). The conceptual and epistemic levels in Brachman’s terminology [7], i.e. the primitives and their relationships have not been addressed adequately for the b ...
... numerous intelligent applications have been developed, the emphasis has been on applying existing techniques in new areas (see for example [6]). The conceptual and epistemic levels in Brachman’s terminology [7], i.e. the primitives and their relationships have not been addressed adequately for the b ...
The Project ENTs: Towards Modeling Human
... reactive in some way; in such case the plan would have to be recomputed. Therefore plans how to achieve goals must be somehow explicitly prescripted and pure planning can be allowed only at times. The key function of a mind would be then an opportunistic switching among prescripted plans to find the ...
... reactive in some way; in such case the plan would have to be recomputed. Therefore plans how to achieve goals must be somehow explicitly prescripted and pure planning can be allowed only at times. The key function of a mind would be then an opportunistic switching among prescripted plans to find the ...
John Dewey and American Social Science
... emancipating in exactly the sense that they would clear away misconceptions about ourselves and our arrangements and empower us to reconstruct the social world more in accordance with our wants and aims. Central to this project was the rejection of the bifurcation of fact and value, a further conseq ...
... emancipating in exactly the sense that they would clear away misconceptions about ourselves and our arrangements and empower us to reconstruct the social world more in accordance with our wants and aims. Central to this project was the rejection of the bifurcation of fact and value, a further conseq ...
essentials of expert system and its applications
... The Artificial Intelligence is concerned with the development of intelligent system. Here system imitates the human capabilities of thinking and sensing. AI has systems the replicates the human decision making capabilities for well-defined problems. In robotics the controlling software uses AI. The ...
... The Artificial Intelligence is concerned with the development of intelligent system. Here system imitates the human capabilities of thinking and sensing. AI has systems the replicates the human decision making capabilities for well-defined problems. In robotics the controlling software uses AI. The ...
Basic Artificial Intelligence Research at the Georgia Institute of
... routes from one intersection on the campus to another (Goel et al. 1991). ROUTER2 plans new routes by retrieving and adapting previous routeplanning cases. ROUTER 3 integrates the model-based and case-based methods for route planning. The control architecture for ROUTER 3 is especially noteworthy. I ...
... routes from one intersection on the campus to another (Goel et al. 1991). ROUTER2 plans new routes by retrieving and adapting previous routeplanning cases. ROUTER 3 integrates the model-based and case-based methods for route planning. The control architecture for ROUTER 3 is especially noteworthy. I ...
THE SOCIAL CONSTITUTION OF EMOTION
... instances of X if it is abstracted from observations of instances of X. In consequence, it is held that the meaning of theoretical constructs must be defined via “correspondence rules” or “operational definitions” in terms of the empirical laws they are introduced to explain. On this account, the “o ...
... instances of X if it is abstracted from observations of instances of X. In consequence, it is held that the meaning of theoretical constructs must be defined via “correspondence rules” or “operational definitions” in terms of the empirical laws they are introduced to explain. On this account, the “o ...
I Agents, Bodies, Constraints, Dynamics, and Evolution Alan K. Mackworth
... the opportunity to give the presidential address at AAAI-07 in Vancouver, my hometown. This article is based on that talk. That opportunity allowed me to step back and think of the big picture, the long perspective. The way to read the title, “Agents, Bodies, Constraints, Dynamics, and Evolution,” a ...
... the opportunity to give the presidential address at AAAI-07 in Vancouver, my hometown. This article is based on that talk. That opportunity allowed me to step back and think of the big picture, the long perspective. The way to read the title, “Agents, Bodies, Constraints, Dynamics, and Evolution,” a ...