
An Architecture for Intelligent Collaborative Educational Systems
... WYSIWYS, the chat facility, and the diagram itself, which helps students switch between working independently and working together without losing track of what they are doing. B2. Limited knowledge of scientific domains: This is addressed in part through on-line materials, and in part through “exper ...
... WYSIWYS, the chat facility, and the diagram itself, which helps students switch between working independently and working together without losing track of what they are doing. B2. Limited knowledge of scientific domains: This is addressed in part through on-line materials, and in part through “exper ...
Study the Knowledge and Culture Factors in the Global Virtual...
... depends on external environment in a large degree and people prefer indirect communication; other cultures are “low context”, which rely on non-language or behavior clues and people prefer direct communication, avoiding the ambiguity of communication. Members in the global virtual team from high con ...
... depends on external environment in a large degree and people prefer indirect communication; other cultures are “low context”, which rely on non-language or behavior clues and people prefer direct communication, avoiding the ambiguity of communication. Members in the global virtual team from high con ...
Artificial neural network
... assumptions and self-learning capability render such a network attractive from the viewpoint of real-world applications. This neural network approach to the signal processing problem of SIS has great advantages over the existing adaptive filtering algorithms. For example when the mixture of other s ...
... assumptions and self-learning capability render such a network attractive from the viewpoint of real-world applications. This neural network approach to the signal processing problem of SIS has great advantages over the existing adaptive filtering algorithms. For example when the mixture of other s ...
The neural mechanisms of top- down attentional control
... analysis13,14 allowed us to combine the spatial resolution necessary for localization of neural activity, which this technique provides, with neuroimaging methods that selectively extract components of hemodynamic activity15 correlated with distinct aspects of complex-task performance. Here we used ...
... analysis13,14 allowed us to combine the spatial resolution necessary for localization of neural activity, which this technique provides, with neuroimaging methods that selectively extract components of hemodynamic activity15 correlated with distinct aspects of complex-task performance. Here we used ...
Unit One: Introduction to Physiology: The Cell and General Physiology
... Sensations- dorsal column can recognize changing stimuli that occur in as little as 1/400 of a second ...
... Sensations- dorsal column can recognize changing stimuli that occur in as little as 1/400 of a second ...
Learning: On the Multiple Facets of a Colloquial Concept
... a bunch of different abilities based on special linguistic, mathematical, sportive, musical, etc. skills as ascribed by Howard Gardner to the phenomenon of “multiple intelligences” (Gardner 1985; 1999). If we go along with Gardner, it is clear that not only cognitive aspects account for intelligence ...
... a bunch of different abilities based on special linguistic, mathematical, sportive, musical, etc. skills as ascribed by Howard Gardner to the phenomenon of “multiple intelligences” (Gardner 1985; 1999). If we go along with Gardner, it is clear that not only cognitive aspects account for intelligence ...
Physiological Psychology
... The Nervous System The nervous system can be simply described as collection of neurons which are arranged to work in a coordinated function. One of the most important functions of the nervous system is to process incoming information in such a way that appropriate mental and motor responses will occ ...
... The Nervous System The nervous system can be simply described as collection of neurons which are arranged to work in a coordinated function. One of the most important functions of the nervous system is to process incoming information in such a way that appropriate mental and motor responses will occ ...
... In case-based reasoning systems, adaptation of retrieved cases plays a crucial role in flexible reuse of stored experiences. However, despite the importance of case adaptation, the case adaptation process remains the least understood part of case-based reasoning. The difficulty of endowingcase-based ...
Main problem of pragmatics
... is absent) – coincides with the highest communicative value on the “y” axes (the subjects are included at most in exchange of the information available). Objectively, the newness, or novelty, is absent; BUT subjectively there is newness of small-talk kind, where the inter-subjectivity stands for obj ...
... is absent) – coincides with the highest communicative value on the “y” axes (the subjects are included at most in exchange of the information available). Objectively, the newness, or novelty, is absent; BUT subjectively there is newness of small-talk kind, where the inter-subjectivity stands for obj ...
Chapter 15: Neural Integration I: Sensory Pathways and the Somatic
... Two types of axons carry painful sensations: Type A and Type C fibers. 1. Myelinated Type A fibers carry sensations of fast pain, or prickling pain, such as that caused by an injection or deep cut. These sensations reach the CNS very quickly and often trigger somatic reflexes. They are also relayed ...
... Two types of axons carry painful sensations: Type A and Type C fibers. 1. Myelinated Type A fibers carry sensations of fast pain, or prickling pain, such as that caused by an injection or deep cut. These sensations reach the CNS very quickly and often trigger somatic reflexes. They are also relayed ...
Canonical Neural Computation: A Summary and a Roadmap A
... The advances that have been made through this integration of neurophysiology and theoretical approaches have helped define the challenges that, when met, will yield the next generation of advances. In our discussions, we outlined several key challenges. (1) The Canonical Computation Toolbox One of t ...
... The advances that have been made through this integration of neurophysiology and theoretical approaches have helped define the challenges that, when met, will yield the next generation of advances. In our discussions, we outlined several key challenges. (1) The Canonical Computation Toolbox One of t ...
Initiation of the arousal response
... may be useful to the non-technical reader. The reader may wish to skim this section, and use it as a reference when questions arise during the reading of the rest of the paper. This brief exposition of the structure and function of the mammalian arousal and motive-emotional system is simplified for ...
... may be useful to the non-technical reader. The reader may wish to skim this section, and use it as a reference when questions arise during the reading of the rest of the paper. This brief exposition of the structure and function of the mammalian arousal and motive-emotional system is simplified for ...
The distributed human neural system for face perception
... the lateral fusiform gyrus. Some sites, however, were lateral to the fusiform gyrus, in the inferior temporal or inferior occipital gyri. The lateral temporal sites were over the posterior middle temporal gyrus, very near the location of the face-responsive region in the posterior superior temporal ...
... the lateral fusiform gyrus. Some sites, however, were lateral to the fusiform gyrus, in the inferior temporal or inferior occipital gyri. The lateral temporal sites were over the posterior middle temporal gyrus, very near the location of the face-responsive region in the posterior superior temporal ...
Modeling Visual Cognition
... The visual system has a limited number of processing resources, which must be allocated optimally when we encode visual stimuli. In Kyllingsbæk, Valla, Vanrie, and Bundesen (2007), we manipulated the spatial separation between several stimulus letters in whole report while keeping the eccentricity o ...
... The visual system has a limited number of processing resources, which must be allocated optimally when we encode visual stimuli. In Kyllingsbæk, Valla, Vanrie, and Bundesen (2007), we manipulated the spatial separation between several stimulus letters in whole report while keeping the eccentricity o ...
CS 561a: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence
... • By monitoring individual neurons, monkeys can now control a computer mouse using thought alone • Moore’s law states computers will have as many gates as humans have neurons in 2020 • How close are we to having a mechanical brain? • Parallel computation, remapping, interconnections, binary vs.彰化師大 ...
... • By monitoring individual neurons, monkeys can now control a computer mouse using thought alone • Moore’s law states computers will have as many gates as humans have neurons in 2020 • How close are we to having a mechanical brain? • Parallel computation, remapping, interconnections, binary vs.彰化師大 ...
ppt - UCL
... classify new images (ie image contains/doesn’t contain a bicycle) • There have been significant advances in solving these types of problems: Support Vector Machines (SVMs), boosting and deep learning are able to give accuracies similar to humans ...
... classify new images (ie image contains/doesn’t contain a bicycle) • There have been significant advances in solving these types of problems: Support Vector Machines (SVMs), boosting and deep learning are able to give accuracies similar to humans ...
the manuscript as pdf
... that their limited functional capacities might be augmented if their highest functional performance level was stabilized. In some cases MCS patients fluctuate quite widely, revealing marked residual cerebral function including capacities for receptive and expressive language (Burruss and Chacko, 199 ...
... that their limited functional capacities might be augmented if their highest functional performance level was stabilized. In some cases MCS patients fluctuate quite widely, revealing marked residual cerebral function including capacities for receptive and expressive language (Burruss and Chacko, 199 ...
artificial intelligence - MET Engineering College
... “It is not my aim to surprise or shock you-but the simplest way I can summarize is to say that there are now in the world machines that think, that learn and that create. Moreover, their ability to do these things is going to increase rapidly until-in a visible future-the range of problems they can ...
... “It is not my aim to surprise or shock you-but the simplest way I can summarize is to say that there are now in the world machines that think, that learn and that create. Moreover, their ability to do these things is going to increase rapidly until-in a visible future-the range of problems they can ...
Central Emotional System
... Emotional autonomic states = reciprocal projections from amygdala to hypothalamus & autonomic n. Influence on conscious feeling: Reciprocal projections from amygdala to hippocampus, cingulate, prefrontal & orbitofrontal cortex. Somatic feedback to cingulate and prefrontal cortex. ...
... Emotional autonomic states = reciprocal projections from amygdala to hypothalamus & autonomic n. Influence on conscious feeling: Reciprocal projections from amygdala to hippocampus, cingulate, prefrontal & orbitofrontal cortex. Somatic feedback to cingulate and prefrontal cortex. ...
Ten Years of the AAAI Mobile Robot Competition and Exhibition
... stalled progress of symbolic AI for robot control, contrasted with Brooks’s and Arkin’s successful reactive strategies, seemed to foreshadow a dominance of behavior-based approaches in the 1990s. In 1992, David Miller and his son, Jacob Milstein, made the point that symbolic representation might not ...
... stalled progress of symbolic AI for robot control, contrasted with Brooks’s and Arkin’s successful reactive strategies, seemed to foreshadow a dominance of behavior-based approaches in the 1990s. In 1992, David Miller and his son, Jacob Milstein, made the point that symbolic representation might not ...
Central Emotional Integration
... Emotional autonomic states = reciprocal projections from amygdala to hypothalamus & autonomic n. Influence on conscious feeling: Reciprocal projections from amygdala to hippocampus, cingulate, prefrontal & orbitofrontal cortex. Somatic feedback to cingulate and prefrontal cortex. ...
... Emotional autonomic states = reciprocal projections from amygdala to hypothalamus & autonomic n. Influence on conscious feeling: Reciprocal projections from amygdala to hippocampus, cingulate, prefrontal & orbitofrontal cortex. Somatic feedback to cingulate and prefrontal cortex. ...
Distinct Mechanisms for Processing Spatial Sequences and Pitch
... interest were assessed using a random effects model that estimated the second level t statistic at a significance threshold of p ⬍ 0.05 after false discovery rate correction for multiple comparisons (Genovese et al., 2002). Individual subject data were analyzed to further assess the anatomical varia ...
... interest were assessed using a random effects model that estimated the second level t statistic at a significance threshold of p ⬍ 0.05 after false discovery rate correction for multiple comparisons (Genovese et al., 2002). Individual subject data were analyzed to further assess the anatomical varia ...
Benchmarking_AROB2004 paper
... large expanse of unknown area with no access to it. It therefore is logical to create the worst possible map of an environment based on where the robot can go. This is done by setting the empty cells to 1, as above, but only change the value of an unknown or occupied cell if it is proximal to an emp ...
... large expanse of unknown area with no access to it. It therefore is logical to create the worst possible map of an environment based on where the robot can go. This is done by setting the empty cells to 1, as above, but only change the value of an unknown or occupied cell if it is proximal to an emp ...
Visual7
... • Meyer’s Loop: course anterior for a short distance in order to move over the lateral ventricles. • 1° cortex, in columnar fissure, is also Brodman’s Area 17. • Densest projection to the 1° visual cortex (like other sensory) is to Layer 4 (Stripe of Gennari). ...
... • Meyer’s Loop: course anterior for a short distance in order to move over the lateral ventricles. • 1° cortex, in columnar fissure, is also Brodman’s Area 17. • Densest projection to the 1° visual cortex (like other sensory) is to Layer 4 (Stripe of Gennari). ...
"The Hidden Mind" - Emotion, Memory and the Brain by
... In addition, the kinds of stimuli most commonly used in this type of conditioning are not signals that rats— or humans, for that matter— encounter in their daily lives. The novelty and irrelevance of these lights and sounds help to ensure that the animals have not already developed strong emotional ...
... In addition, the kinds of stimuli most commonly used in this type of conditioning are not signals that rats— or humans, for that matter— encounter in their daily lives. The novelty and irrelevance of these lights and sounds help to ensure that the animals have not already developed strong emotional ...