Foundations of Cognitive Psychology: Preface - Preface
imitation game as Turing presented it permit the judge to ask any question that could be asked of a human being—no holds barred. ...
But still, you may protest, something might pass the Turing test and still not be intelligent, not be a thinker. What doesmightm ...
the rest of the city’s treasures. I would cheerfully run the minuscule risk of havingmybluffcalled.Obviously,thetestitemsarenota ...
should resist all limitations and waterings-down of the Turing test. They make the game too easy—vastly easier than the original ...
explosion. A computer a million times bigger or faster than a human brain might not look like the brain of a human being, or eve ...
But now, more seriously, was this an honest-to-goodness Turing test? Were there tacit restrictions on the lines of questioning o ...
medical problems, to analyze geological data, to analyze the results of scientific experiments, and the like. Some of them are v ...
very hard to extrapolate accurately from a sample performance that one has observed to such a system’s total competence. It’s al ...
knowledge of the underlying causal mechanisms of the phenomena that they are diagnosing. To take an imaginary example, an expert ...
the way system designers must think. They are trained to think positively— constructively, one might say—about the designs that ...
genuine understanding of a rich and intimate perceptual interconnection be- tween an entity and its surrounding world—the need f ...
A :‘‘It turns out, to my amazement, that something can think without having had the benefit of eyes, ears, hands, and a history. ...
The lowly lobster is, in one regard, self-conscious. If you want to know whether or not you can create that on the computer, the ...
appreciate that these models cast light on the deep theoretical question of how the mind is organized. Postscript [1997] In 1991 ...
faulty briefing of the confederates, several of them gave deliberately clunky, automaton-like answers. It turned out that they h ...
Descartes, R. (1637).Discourse on Method, LaFleur, Lawrence, trans., New York :Bobbs Merrill, 1960. Haugeland, J. (1981).Mind De ...
partii Neural Networks ...
Chapter 4 The Appeal of Parallel Distributed Processing Jay L. McClelland, David E. Rumelhart, and Geoffrey E. Hinton What makes ...
Multiple Simultaneous Constraints Reaching and Grasping Hundreds of times each day we reach for things .We nearly never think ab ...
Figure 4.1 A: An everyday situation in which it is necessary to take into account a large number of constraints to grasp a desir ...
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