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A Missing Link In Cybernetics Logic And Continuity Alex M Andrew

  • SKU: BELL-47828620
A Missing Link In Cybernetics Logic And Continuity Alex M Andrew
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A Missing Link In Cybernetics Logic And Continuity Alex M Andrew instant download after payment.

Publisher: Springer
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.19 MB
Pages: 147
Author: Alex M. Andrew
ISBN: 9780387751634, 0387751637
Language: English
Year: 2009

Product desciption

A Missing Link In Cybernetics Logic And Continuity Alex M Andrew by Alex M. Andrew 9780387751634, 0387751637 instant download after payment.

In this book I argue that a reason for the limited success of various studies under the general heading of cybernetics is failure to appreciate the importance of con- nuity, in a simple metrical sense of the term. It is with particular, but certainly not exclusive, reference to the Arti cial Intelligence (AI) effort that the shortcomings of established approaches are most easily seen. One reason for the relative failure of attempts to analyse and model intelligence is the customary assumption that the processing of continuous variables and the manipulation of discrete concepts should be considered separately, frequently with the assumption that continuous processing plays no part in thought. There is much evidence to the contrary incl- ing the observation that the remarkable ability of people and animals to learn from experience nds similar expression in tasks of both discrete and continuous nature and in tasks that require intimate mixing of the two. Such tasks include everyday voluntary movement while preserving balance and posture, with competitive games and athletics offering extreme examples. Continuous measures enter into many tasks that are usually presented as discrete. In tasks of pattern recognition, for example, there is often a continuous measure of the similarity of an imposed pattern to each of a set of paradigms, of which the most similar is selected. The importance of continuity is also indicated by the fact that adjectives and adverbs in everyday verbal communication have comparative and superlative forms.

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