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CS 561a: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence
CS 561a: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence

... • One is biological, based on the idea that since humans are intelligent, AI should study humans and imitate their psychology or physiology. • The other is phenomenal, based on studying and formalizing common sense facts about the world and the problems that the world presents to the achievement of ...
Should Actuaries Get Another Job? Nassim
Should Actuaries Get Another Job? Nassim

... since your error rate grows very rapidly. The problem is that near precision is not possible since the degradation of your forecast compounds abruptly—you would eventually need to figure out the past with infinite precision. Poincaré showed this in a very simple case, famously known as the “three bo ...
Foucault`s Deconstruction of the Subject: A Feminist Epistemological
Foucault`s Deconstruction of the Subject: A Feminist Epistemological

... Things, where Foucault states that “language becomes object”1 in comparison to the more representative function language possessed during the Classical and Renaissance eras. He argues that “to know language is no longer to come as close as possible to knowledge itself; it is merely to apply the meth ...
Emotions — The missing link? Rodrigo Ventura
Emotions — The missing link? Rodrigo Ventura

... in memory following a structured knowledge representation mechanism. The intertwining of these two processing mechanisms — cognitive and perceptual — is based on marking the “cognitive image” (to store in memory) with the corresponding “perceptual image” both detached from the original stimulus. Not ...
From Agent Theory to Agent Construction: A Case Study
From Agent Theory to Agent Construction: A Case Study

... an implemented system and then formalizing the semantics in an agent language which can be viewed as an abstraction of the implemented system, and which allows agent programs to be written and interpreted [26]. Goodwin has also attempted to bridge the gap by providing a formal description in the for ...
PowerPoint
PowerPoint

... dedicated to a restricted but well defined area of application systems incorporating modelling and analysis with data and database management systems systems which do not make decisions, but facilitate logistics of decision making process interactive systems that help decision maker systematise deci ...
A Neural Network Based Navigation for Intelligent Autonomous
A Neural Network Based Navigation for Intelligent Autonomous

... knowledge representation for an implicit one based on acquisitions of intelligent behaviours with its environments, they have to orient themselves, explore their environments autonomously, recover from failure, and perform whole families of tasks in real-time. However, the mobile robot is appropriat ...
From NARS to a Thinking Machine
From NARS to a Thinking Machine

... aspects of NARS, which are linked from the author’s website. Especially, [1] is a recent comprehensive description of the project. If there is anything that the field of Artificial Intelligence (AI) has learned in its fifty-year history, it is the complexity and difficulty of making computer systems ...
From Agent Theory to Agent Construction: A Case Study
From Agent Theory to Agent Construction: A Case Study

... an implemented system and then formalizing the semantics in an agent language which can be viewed as an abstraction of the implemented system, and which allows agent programs to be written and interpreted [26]. Goodwin has also attempted to bridge the gap by providing a formal description in the for ...
pdf
pdf

... areas of interest for AI began to crystallize. These areas targeted individual intelligent capabilities: knowledge representation, planning, computer vision, natural language understanding, machine learning, etc. In what later became known as classical AI, these problems were generally tackled by id ...
From Agent Theory to Agent Construction: A Case Study
From Agent Theory to Agent Construction: A Case Study

... an implemented system and then formalizing the semantics in an agent language which can be viewed as an abstraction of the implemented system, and which allows agent programs to be written and interpreted [26]. Goodwin has also attempted to bridge the gap by providing a formal description in the for ...
Professions as Science-Based Occupations
Professions as Science-Based Occupations

... nation. In other words it should be universal (independent of time and space), or context-independent, to use one more term. An overarching abstract definition based on invariant elements can be combined with definitions involving variant properties characteristic of various periods of time and cond ...
Why ethics is hard: or some of the reasons why
Why ethics is hard: or some of the reasons why

... they have one) of the various things that we might incidentally ostend, but with phenomenal content we find something to ostend, and this ostended thing turns out to be the essential and underlying explanation (insofar as they have one) of the various formulae that we might incidentally formulate. H ...
Criticism and a First Selectionist Metamodel for the Growth of
Criticism and a First Selectionist Metamodel for the Growth of

... validate knowledge? This other view, in which the source and the justification of knowledge do not constitute a relevant epistemological question, has been widely overlooked by scientists and philosophers of science in general. However, this is the epistemology of the most influential scientists of ...
CULTURAL THEORY AND HISTORY: THEORETICAL ISSUES
CULTURAL THEORY AND HISTORY: THEORETICAL ISSUES

... Although the theories of history proposed by Foucault or Dominick LaCapra are detailed and thoroughly worked out, they still remain within the intellectual horizon opened up by Nietzsche. Even the interpretation of the construction of historical knowledge construction according to class interests, t ...
caethnography in the way of theory
caethnography in the way of theory

... me to reckon with more than a decade ago. Ethnographic subjects allow us to return to the places where thought is born. Catarina refused her own erasure and she anticipated an exit from Vita. It was as difficult as it was important to sustain this anticipation: to find ways to support Catarina’s sea ...
Final
Final

... 1. Surprisingly, sibling studies suggest that the most important factor for all of our big 5 traits appears to be A. our shared environments. B. our-non shared environments. C. our genetics. D. our exposure to viruses at a young age. ANSWER: B % Correct: 88 Though a lot of weight has been put on the ...
Copyright notice: this is a non-finalised version of a chapter
Copyright notice: this is a non-finalised version of a chapter

... in the context of a relation between researcher and researched Secondly, as Gadamer would argue, the researcher brings her own prejudices to research. These prejudices are not biases that could be removed through refined analysis but are, rather, constitutive conditions of the research activityiii. ...
locke
locke

...  Book I argues that we have no innate knowledge. (In this he resembles Berkeley and Hume, and differs from Descartes and Leibniz.) So, at birth, the human mind is a sort of blank slate on which experience writes.  In Book II Locke claims that ideas are the materials of knowledge and all ideas come ...
Neurophysiological bases underlying the organization of intentional
Neurophysiological bases underlying the organization of intentional

... intentionality in such a way, suggesting that the intention of doing a certain act is something that precedes its actual motor execution, and that it is usually associated with the conscious experience of ‘agency’. Wittgenstein (1953) already envisioned the complexity of this issue by posing the que ...
Universal Artificial Intelligence: Practical Agents and Fundamental
Universal Artificial Intelligence: Practical Agents and Fundamental

... Induction and deduction. Within the field of AI, a distinction can be made between systems focusing on reasoning and systems focusing on learning. Deductive reasoning systems typically rely on logic or other symbolic systems, and use search algorithms to combine inference steps. Examples of primaril ...
Environmental Grain, Organism Fitness, and Type
Environmental Grain, Organism Fitness, and Type

... useful to understand when such modeling practices capture real aspects of evolutionary processes, and when structured environments count, instead, as mere modeling conveniences. This will help to clarify relationships between models, the systems they concern, and empirical evidence. Note that a work ...
Agents - PNU-CS-AI
Agents - PNU-CS-AI

...  A utility function maps a state (or a sequence of states) onto a real number. The agent can also use these numbers to weigh the importance of competing goals.  Ex taxi driving , may be many paths lead to goal but some are quicker, cheaper, safer ...
Knowledge Management
Knowledge Management

... diminishing returns. When it is used, it is not consumed. Its consumers can add to it, thus increasing its value. branches and fragments. Knowledge is dynamic; it is information in action. Thus, an organization must continually refresh its knowledge base to maintain it as a source of competitive adv ...
Collapsing Distinctions: Interacting within Fields of Intelligence on
Collapsing Distinctions: Interacting within Fields of Intelligence on

... intelligence, the nature of which cannot be known in advance. This is critical. This newly recognized intelligence would, no doubt, have arisen from a process of evolution that may also not be knowable. Stuart Kauffman has argued persuasively (Kaufman 2000) that it is not possible to finitely presta ...
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Enactivism

Enactivism argues that cognition arises through a dynamic interaction between an acting organism and its environment. It claims that our environment is one which we selectively create through our capacities to interact with the world. ""Organisms do not passively receive information from their environments, which they then translate into internal representations. Natural cognitive systems...participate in the generation of meaning ...engaging in transformational and not merely informational interactions: they enact a world."" These authors suggest that the increasing emphasis upon enactive terminology presages a new era in thinking about cognitive science. How the actions involved in enactivism relate to age-old questions about free will remains a topic of active debate.The term 'enactivism' is close in meaning to 'enaction', defined as ""the manner in which a subject of perception creatively matches its actions to the requirements of its situation"". The introduction of the term enaction in this context is attributed to Francisco Varela, Evan Thompson, and Eleanor Rosch, who proposed the name to ""emphasize the growing conviction that cognition is not the representation of a pre-given world by a pre-given mind but is rather the enactment of a world and a mind on the basis of a history of the variety of actions that a being in the world performs"". This was further developed by Thompson and others, to place emphasis upon the idea that experience of the world is a result of mutual interaction between the sensorimotor capacities of the organism and its environment.The initial emphasis of enactivism upon sensorimotor skills has been criticized as ""cognitively marginal"", but it has been extended to apply to higher level cognitive activities, such as social interactions. ""In the enactive view,... knowledge is constructed: it is constructed by an agent through its sensorimotor interactions with its environment, co-constructed between and within living species through their meaningful interaction with each other. In its most abstract form, knowledge is co-constructed between human individuals in socio-linguistic interactions...Science is a particular form of social knowledge construction...[that] allows us to perceive and predict events beyond our immediate cognitive grasp...and also to construct further, even more powerful scientific knowledge.""Enactivism is closely related to situated cognition and embodied cognition, and is presented as an alternative to cognitivism, computationalism, and Cartesian dualism.
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