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Human Problem Solving (Hardcover, Reprint ed.): Allen Newell, Herbert A. Simon Human Problem Solving (Hardcover, Reprint ed.)
Allen Newell, Herbert A. Simon
R1,668 Discovery Miles 16 680 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Universal Subgoaling and Chunking - The Automatic Generation and Learning of Goal Hierarchies (Hardcover, 1986 ed.): John... Universal Subgoaling and Chunking - The Automatic Generation and Learning of Goal Hierarchies (Hardcover, 1986 ed.)
John Laird, Paul Rosenbloom, Allen Newell
R4,422 Discovery Miles 44 220 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Rarely do research paths diverge and converge as neatly and productively as the paths exemplified by the two efforts contained in this book. The story behind these researches is worth recounting. The story, as far as I'm concerned, starts back in the Fall of1976, when John Laird and Paul Rosenbloom, as new graduate students in computer science at Carnegie-Mellon University, joined the Instructible Production System (IPS) project (Rychener, Forgy, Langley, McDermott, Newell, Ramakrishna, 1977; Rychener & Newell, 1978). In those days, production systems were either small or special or both (Newell, 1973; Shortliffe, 1976). Mike Rychener had just completed his thesis (Rychener, 1976), showing how production systems could effectively and perspicuously program the full array of artificial intelligence (AI) systems, by creating versions of Studellt (done in an earlier study, Rychener 1975), EPAM, GPS, King-Pawn-King endgames, a toy-blocks problem solver, and a natural-language input system that connected to the blocks-world system.

Universal Subgoaling and Chunking - The Automatic Generation and Learning of Goal Hierarchies (Paperback, Softcover reprint of... Universal Subgoaling and Chunking - The Automatic Generation and Learning of Goal Hierarchies (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1986)
John Laird, Paul Rosenbloom, Allen Newell
R4,241 Discovery Miles 42 410 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Rarely do research paths diverge and converge as neatly and productively as the paths exemplified by the two efforts contained in this book. The story behind these researches is worth recounting. The story, as far as I'm concerned, starts back in the Fall of1976, when John Laird and Paul Rosenbloom, as new graduate students in computer science at Carnegie-Mellon University, joined the Instructible Production System (IPS) project (Rychener, Forgy, Langley, McDermott, Newell, Ramakrishna, 1977; Rychener & Newell, 1978). In those days, production systems were either small or special or both (Newell, 1973; Shortliffe, 1976). Mike Rychener had just completed his thesis (Rychener, 1976), showing how production systems could effectively and perspicuously program the full array of artificial intelligence (AI) systems, by creating versions of Studellt (done in an earlier study, Rychener 1975), EPAM, GPS, King-Pawn-King endgames, a toy-blocks problem solver, and a natural-language input system that connected to the blocks-world system.

Unified Theories of Cognition (Paperback, New Ed): Allen Newell Unified Theories of Cognition (Paperback, New Ed)
Allen Newell
R1,598 Discovery Miles 15 980 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Psychology is now ready for unified theories of cognition--so says Allen Newell, a leading investigator in computer science and cognitive psychology. Not everyone will agree on a single set of mechanisms that will explain the full range of human cognition, but such theories are within reach and we should strive to articulate them.

In this book, Newell makes the case for unified theories by setting forth a candidate. After reviewing the foundational concepts of cognitive science--knowledge, representation, computation, symbols, architecture, intelligence, and search--Newell introduces Soar, an architecture for general cognition. A pioneer system in artificial intelligence, Soar is the first problem solver to create its own subgoals and learn continuously from its own experience.

Newell shows how Soar's ability to operate within the real-time constraints of intelligent behavior, such as immediate-response and item-recognition tasks, illustrates important characteristics of the human cognitive structure. Throughout, Soar remains an exemplar: we know only enough to work toward a fully developed theory of cognition, but Soar's success so far establishes the viability of the enterprise.

Given its integrative approach, "Unified Theories of Cognition" will be of tremendous interest to researchers in a variety of fields, including cognitive science, artificial intelligence, psychology, and computer science. This exploration of the nature of mind, one of the great problems of philosophy, should also transcend disciplines and attract a large scientific audience.

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