Search results for " architecture"

showing 10 items of 2595 documents

How to engineer biologically inspired cognitive architectures

2013

Biologically inspired cognitive architectures are complex systems where different modules of cognition interact in order to reach the global goals of the system in a changing environment. Engineering and modeling this kind of systems is a hard task due to the lack of techniques for developing and implementing features like learning, knowledge, experience, memory, adaptivity in an inter-modular fashion. We propose a new concept of intelligent agent as abstraction for developing biologically cognitive architectures. © 2013 Springer-Verlag.

Cognitive systemsComputer scienceBiologically inspiredComplex systemCognitionCognitive architecturecomputer.software_genreCognitive architectureTask (project management)Biologically inspired cognitive architecturedesign processIntelligent agentAdaptivityChanging environmentHuman–computer interactionHard taskcomputerSocial simulationAbstraction (linguistics)
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New Technology, Writing And Learning

2001

The participants involved in most previous studies on writing have written their texts by hand but writing with the aid of a computer is much more prevalent today. This chapter specifically examines the effects of new technology on writing and, by implication, on writing to learn, and presents examples how technology has created new possibilities for using writing for purposes of learning. The chapter is divided into four main parts. Part one briefly introduces the chapter. Part two considers the nature of writing in terms of interactions between planning, writing and editing. Part three examines how computer aided writing changes these processes. Here individual and collaborative writing a…

Collaborative writingComputer scienceComputer-aidedEducational technologyMathematics educationComputer basedExperiential learningElectronic mailWord (computer architecture)Learning sciences
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On Brauer’s Height Zero Conjecture

2014

In this paper, the unproven half of Richard Brauer’s Height Zero Conjecture is reduced to a question on simple groups.

CombinatoricsComputer Science::Hardware ArchitectureConjectureApplied MathematicsGeneral MathematicsSimple groupBlock theoryZero (complex analysis)Mathematics::Representation TheoryMathematicsCollatz conjectureJournal of the European Mathematical Society
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Circuit Lower Bounds via Ehrenfeucht-Fraisse Games

2006

In this paper we prove that the class of functions expressible by first order formulas with only two variables coincides with the class of functions computable by AC/sup 0/ circuits with a linear number of gates. We then investigate the feasibility of using Ehrenfeucht-Fraisse games to prove lower bounds for that class of circuits, as well as for general AC/sup 0/ circuits.

CombinatoricsDiscrete mathematicsComputer Science::Hardware ArchitectureClass (set theory)Computer Science::Emerging TechnologiesComputabilityGame complexityEhrenfeucht–Fraïssé gameCircuit complexityGame theoryLinear numberElectronic circuitMathematics21st Annual IEEE Conference on Computational Complexity (CCC'06)
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A code to evaluate prolate and oblate spheroidal harmonics

1998

Abstract We present a code to evaluate prolate ( P n m ( x ), Q n m ( x ); n ≥ m , x > 1) and oblate ( P n m ( ix ), Q n m ( ix ); n ≥ m , x > 0) spheroidal harmonics, that is, spherical harmonics ( n and m integers) for real arguments larger than one and for purely imaginary arguments. We start from the known values (in closed form) of P m m and P m +1 m and we apply the forward recurrence relation over n up to a given degree n = N Max . The Wronskian relating P 's and Q 's, together with the evaluation of the continued fraction for Q m+N staggeredMax m / Q m+N staggeredMax -1 m , allows the calculation of Q m+N staggeredMax m and Q m+N staggeredMax -1 m . Backward recurrence is then appli…

CombinatoricsRecurrence relationDegree (graph theory)Legendre seriesHardware and ArchitectureWronskianHarmonicsOblate spheroidGeneral Physics and AstronomySpherical harmonicsGeometryProlate spheroidMathematicsComputer Physics Communications
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Forbidden Factors and Fragment Assembly

2001

In this paper methods and results related to the notion of minimal forbidden words are applied to the fragment assembly problem. The fragment assembly problem can be formulated, in its simplest form, as follows: reconstruct a word w from a given set I of substrings (fragments ) of a word w . We introduce an hypothesis involving the set of fragments I and the maximal length m(w) of the minimal forbidden factors of w . Such hypothesis allows us to reconstruct uniquely the word w from the set I in linear time. We prove also that, if w is a word randomly generated by a memoryless source with identical symbol probabilities, m(w) is logarithmic with respect to the size of w . This result shows th…

CombinatoricsSet (abstract data type)Fragment (logic)LogarithmDeterministic automatonSymbol (programming)General MathematicsTime complexitySoftwareWord (computer architecture)SubstringComputer Science ApplicationsMathematicsRAIRO - Theoretical Informatics and Applications
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Null Effect of Set Size in Lexical Decision

1995

The effect of set size indicates that recall of a word is greater when its cue is associated with fewer words. This study was designed to replicate this result with lexical decisions of 18 students. In spite of obtaining the set-size effect with cue recall, it was not observed with lexical decision.

CommunicationRecallbusiness.industryNull (mathematics)Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyReplicatecomputer.software_genreSensory SystemsSpiteLexical decision taskArtificial intelligenceSet (psychology)businesscomputerNatural language processingWord (computer architecture)MathematicsPerceptual and Motor Skills
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Replicating Experiments in “Detour Behavior” with Artificially Evolved Robots: An A-Life Approach to Comparative Psychology

1999

To be useful in psychology "artificial organisms" have to perform tasks comparable to those performed by animals. One way to achieve this is to rephcate actual animal experiments. Here we reproduce an experiment showing "detour behavior" in chicks - a behavior usually explained in terms of "cognitive maps" or other forms of internal representation. We artificially evolve software-simulated robots with a "generic" ability to detour. Sensor-motor physics are carefully calibrated with data from a physical robot. Robot architecture is constrained to exclude internal representation. The evolutionary process rewards exploratory skills as well as detour behavior. Robot performance matches the resu…

Comparative psychologyCognitive mapProcess (engineering)business.industryRobotMobile robotArtificial intelligenceRepresentation (mathematics)businessFitness scoreRobot architecture
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Competition Logics during Digital Platform Evolution

2018

How are platforms built and how do they evolve? This is a salient question in digital ecosystems, where the competition has moved from traditional one-sided business logics to multi-sided platforms. In this paper, we explore how a digital platform evolves when the organization of the multilayered platform architecture, and related control points, is modified through competitive moves. We also examine how a firm may be able to manage the increased complexity of the platform. We show that when technical and strategic bottlenecks are solved, the platform owner can expand control to strategically important layers of the platform stack. The findings indicate that the complexity of the platform i…

Competition (economics)Design architecturebusiness.industryMultihomingComputer science0502 economics and business05 social sciences050211 marketingdigital platform evolutiondigital platformsTelecommunicationsbusiness050203 business & management
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Predictive and Evolutive Cross-Referencing for Web Textual Sources

2017

International audience; One of the main challenges in the domain of competitive intelligence is to harness important volumes of information from the web, and extract the most valuable pieces of information. As the amount of information available on the web grows rapidly and is very heterogeneous, this process becomes overwhelming for experts. To leverage this challenge, this paper presents a vision for a novel process that performs cross-referencing at web scale. This process uses a focused crawler and a semantic-based classifier to cross-reference textual items without expert intervention, based on Big Data and Semantic Web technologies. The system is described thoroughly, and interests of…

Competitive intelligenceComputer science[SPI] Engineering Sciences [physics]Big data02 engineering and technologyReasonningFocused crawlerDiscovery[INFO] Computer Science [cs]World Wide WebKnowledge-based systems[INFO.INFO-NI]Computer Science [cs]/Networking and Internet Architecture [cs.NI][SPI]Engineering Sciences [physics]020204 information systems0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringLeverage (statistics)[INFO]Computer Science [cs]Semantic Web[INFO.INFO-NI] Computer Science [cs]/Networking and Internet Architecture [cs.NI]business.industryOntologyFocused CrawlerWork in processClassificationAdaptive[SPI.TRON] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Electronics[SPI.TRON]Engineering Sciences [physics]/ElectronicsCross-ReferencingClasssification020201 artificial intelligence & image processingbusinessClassifier (UML)Model
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