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səhifə | 2/8 | tarix | 25.12.2023 | ölçüsü | 19,34 Kb. | | #194716 |
| 901470 Chap1
Systems that act like humans - These cognitive tasks include:
- Natural language processing
- for communication with human
- Knowledge representation
- to store information effectively & efficiently
- Automated reasoning
- to retrieve & answer questions using the stored information
- Machine learning
- to adapt to new circumstances
The total Turing Test - Includes two more issues:
- Computer vision
- to perceive objects (seeing)
- Robotics
Systems that think like humans: cognitive modeling - Humans as observed from ‘inside’
- How do we know how humans think?
- Introspection vs. psychological experiments
- Cognitive Science
- “The exciting new effort to make computers think … machines with minds in the full and literal sense” (Haugeland)
- “[The automation of] activities that we associate with human thinking, activities such as decision-making, problem solving, learning …” (Bellman)
Systems that think ‘rationally’ "laws of thought" - Humans are not always ‘rational’
- Rational - defined in terms of logic?
- Logic can’t express everything (e.g. uncertainty)
- Logical approach is often not feasible in terms of computation time (needs ‘guidance’)
- “The study of mental facilities through the use of computational models” (Charniak and McDermott)
- “The study of the computations that make it possible to perceive, reason, and act” (Winston)
Systems that act rationally: “Rational agent” - Rational behavior: doing the right thing
- The right thing: that which is expected to maximize goal achievement, given the available information
- Giving answers to questions is ‘acting’.
- I don't care whether a system:
- replicates human thought processes
- makes the same decisions as humans
- uses purely logical reasoning
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