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1.2 Implicit Bias, Reinforcement Learning, and Scaffolded Moral
1.2 Implicit Bias, Reinforcement Learning, and Scaffolded Moral

... (Correll et al 2002). In any particular case, there is room to debate about the relative contribution of explicit prejudice and implicit bias, but it is hard to deny that racial stereotypes can—and often do— have a serious and deleterious impact on morally salient behavior. Philosophers have long a ...
pdf file
pdf file

... experienced, which often covers cognitive as well as affective dimensions. Although this is a very common type of phenomenon, at forehand it is not at all clear how it can emerge. For example, the experience of feeling good being part of a group with a shared understanding and collective action may ...
Chaper 1. A Brief History of Cognitive Neuroscience
Chaper 1. A Brief History of Cognitive Neuroscience

... Starting in the 1930s, Clinton Woolsey, Philip Bard, and others began to discover motor and sensory “maps” in the brain. In the 1970s and 1980s, we learned that multiple maps exist in each sensory modality. We now know there are very localized areas in the brain, such as the middle temporal area whi ...
Anthropomorphism and The Social Robot
Anthropomorphism and The Social Robot

... physical similarity to a person is only starting to embrace basic humanlike attributes, and predominantly the physical aspect in humanoid research (see http://www.androidworld.com), but just as in HCI, rigorous research is needed to identify the physical attributes important in facilitating the soci ...
pdf - people.csail.mit.edu
pdf - people.csail.mit.edu

... mind, to the intelligent agents involved in col- ...
The	New	Raja	Yoga:	What	Hinduism	Has	Taught Me	About	Life,	Student	Affairs,	and	Myself  • 3
The New Raja Yoga: What Hinduism Has Taught Me About Life, Student Affairs, and Myself • 3

... strive to better understand how each person’s experience is connected to the development of others. The study of literature and intellectual meditations are critical for this Yoga. This is best for those who have the time to ponder universal questions, describe observations, and formulate theory. Ka ...
The Triangle of Life
The Triangle of Life

... hardware) as introduced in Eiben et al. (2012). The roadmap outlined there considers embodiment in the broad sense, including biochemical approaches and treats mechatronics based embodied evolution as one of the possible incarnations. The work presented here represents the first detailed elaboration ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... Emphasise the importance of personal experience and interpretation of learning. Students construct new concepts based on current knowledge Curriculum should build on what they have already learned. ...
Microsoft PowerPoint - Bournemouth University Research Online
Microsoft PowerPoint - Bournemouth University Research Online

... Emphasise the importance of personal experience and interpretation of learning. Students construct new concepts based on current knowledge Curriculum should build on what they have already learned. ...
The endogenously active brain - William Bechtel
The endogenously active brain - William Bechtel

... represent  information  resulted  from  investigations  of  sensory  and  motor  processing  in   which  it  was  possible  to  link  brain  activity  (typically  spiking  rates  of  neurons)  with  sensory   stimuli  or  motor  activities. ...
A Design of Criminal Investigation Expert System Based on CILS
A Design of Criminal Investigation Expert System Based on CILS

... network and fuzzy system provides many new tools for development of expert system [5, 6]), few successful expert systems are available. Expert systems are improving as technology advances. In the past, expert systems have received criticism and some negative publicity because of the failures that we ...
Rerum cognoscere causas: Part II
Rerum cognoscere causas: Part II

... notion that causal laws have no place in social sciences at all" (Giddens, 1982, p.15). Structuration theory posits a notion of 'agent causality' in which causal relations are an element of the rationalizations and maxims that agents use. Giddens describes, "an agent's reflexive monitoring of his of ...
A Robotic Ecosystem with Evolvable Minds and Bodies
A Robotic Ecosystem with Evolvable Minds and Bodies

... periods, planetary missions, such as terraforming, deep sea explorations, or medical nano-robots acting as ‘personal virus scanners’ inside the human body. Evolution can also be put to work in closer to home scenarios. Including the human in the loop to influence selection, the classic approach to d ...
Chapter 1 Psychometric Artificial General Intelligence: The Piaget
Chapter 1 Psychometric Artificial General Intelligence: The Piaget

... What is AI? We’d be willing to wager that many of you have been asked this question — by colleagues, reporters, friends and family, and others. Even if by some fluke you’ve dodged the question, perhaps you’ve asked it yourself, maybe even perhaps (in secret moments, if you’re a practitioner) to your ...
CYBERNETICS: A Definition
CYBERNETICS: A Definition

... not depend on the indefinite retention of a structural invariant that represents an entity (an idea, image or symbol), but on the functional ability of the system to create, when certain recurrent demands are given, a behavior that satisfies the recurrent demands or that the observer would class as ...
Amédée or how to get rid of it: social representations... Ivana Markova, University of Stirling
Amédée or how to get rid of it: social representations... Ivana Markova, University of Stirling

... one point of view is opposed to another, one evaluation opposed to another, one accent opposed to another...this dialogic tension between two languages and two belief systems, permits authorial intentions to be realized in such a way that we can acutely sense their presence at every point in the wor ...
galaxia 17.indd - Revistas Eletrônicas da PUC-SP
galaxia 17.indd - Revistas Eletrônicas da PUC-SP

... one wants, but that there are factors of reality that influence our thoughts from outside. The idealist side defends the position that nothing can exist that is not “thought-like”, since ideas can only resemble other ideas (Daniel, 1984, p. 16). The dynamic quality of both semeiosic processes and re ...
The adversarial stochastic shortest path problem with unknown
The adversarial stochastic shortest path problem with unknown

... Table 1: Existing results related to our work. For each paper we describe the setup by specifying the type of the reward function and feedback, whether the results correspond to a general MDP with loops (we do not list other restrictions presented in the papers such as mixing) or the loop-free SSP, ...
Artificial Intelligence and Expert Systems
Artificial Intelligence and Expert Systems

... Learn or understand from experience Make sense out of ambiguous situations Respond quickly to new situations Use reasoning to solve problems Understanding and inferring in a rational way Apply knowledge to manipulate the environment Thinking and reasoning Recognizing and judging the relative importa ...
Artificial intelligence - University of London International Programmes
Artificial intelligence - University of London International Programmes

... aim to replicate human behaviour, albeit without regard to mechanism. However, most modern AI programs are instead designed to act rationally, meaning that they take the best possible action given their goals, knowledge and constraints. This is an important goal formulation for three reasons. First, ...


... world facing significant climatic change over the next half century. The IAASTD report recognised the failure of past technological innovations and trade to benefit poor people as well as the harm these factors had caused to the environment. This latter point was further emphasised by Professor Wats ...
Proceedings of the Workshop “Formalizing Mechanisms for Artificial
Proceedings of the Workshop “Formalizing Mechanisms for Artificial

... – including the possibility of ignoring a modality altogether. Altering a modality’s focus increases or decreases the frequency with which its internal processes run. This allows an agent to prioritize processing of percepts from a particular modality relative to the others depending on its current ...
Total Force Fitness: A Brief Overview
Total Force Fitness: A Brief Overview

... Volume  175,  No  8,  the  two  categories  of  the  “mind”  and  the  “body”   intersect.    This  represents  a  new  paradigm.  Total  holis,c  fitness  does  not   just  involve,  as  previously  understood,  physical  fitness.    I ...
The Cerebellum - Amanda Parsons
The Cerebellum - Amanda Parsons

... fighting (with other people), freezing (in helplessness), or fleeing (from challenges) (Seigel, 2012). Without knowledge of this area and its role in these states, we can be confused or even ...
Reflection on Piaget - Michigan State University
Reflection on Piaget - Michigan State University

... their mental schemes (psychological structures that organize experience). This reconciliation can take the form of assimilation or accommodation (or often both). Assimilation occurs when experiences (physically with the world or communicatively with other individuals) are incorporated into existing ...
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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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