Séminaire au DIC: «Rethinking the Physical Symbol Systems Hypothesis» par Paul S. Rosenbloom

Séminaire ayant lieu dans le cadre du doctorat en informatique cognitive, en collaboration avec le centre de recherche CRIA et l'ISC  

 

Paul ROSENBLOOM

Jeudi le 12 octobre 2023 à 10h30

PK-5115 (aussi possible d'y assister à distance, pour ce faire, vous devez vous inscrire ici)   

 

Titre : Rethinking the Physical Symbol Systems Hypothesis

 

Résumé

It is now more than a half-century since the Physical Symbol Systems Hypothesis (PSSH) was first articulated as an empirical hypothesis.  More recent evidence from work with neural networks and cognitive architectures has weakened it, but it has not yet been replaced in any satisfactory manner.  Based on a rethinking of the nature of computational symbols – as atoms or placeholders – and thus also of the systems in which they participate, a hybrid approach is introduced that responds to these challenges while also helping to bridge the gap between symbolic and neural approaches, resulting in two new hypotheses, one – the Hybrid Symbol Systems Hypothesis (HSSH) – that is to replace the PSSH and the other focused more directly on cognitive architectures.  This overall approach has been inspired by how hybrid symbol systems are central in the Common Model of Cognition and the Sigma cognitive architectures, both of which will be introduced – along with the general notion of a cognitive architecture – via “flashbacks” during the presentation.

 

Biographie 

Paul S. ROSENBLOOM is a Professor Emeritus of Computer Science in the Viterbi School of Engineering at the University of Southern California (USC).  His research has focused on cognitive architectures (models of the fixed structures and processes that together yield a mind), such as Soar and Sigma; the Common Model of Cognition (a partial consensus about the structure of a human-like mind); dichotomic maps (structuring the space of technologies underlying AI and cognitive science); “essential” definitions of key concepts in AI and cognitive science (such as intelligence, theories, symbols, and architectures); and the relational model of computing as a great scientific domain (akin to the physical, life and social sciences).

 

References  

Rosenbloom, P. S. (2023). Rethinking the Physical Symbol Systems Hypothesis.  In Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Artificial General Intelligence (pp. 207-216).  Cham, Switzerland: Springer.  

Laird, J. E., Lebiere, C. & Rosenbloom, P. S. (2017). A Standard Model of the Mind: Toward a Common Computational Framework across Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Science, Neuroscience, and Robotics. AI Magazine, 38, 13-26.  

Rosenbloom, P. S., Demski, A. & Ustun, V. (2016).  The Sigma cognitive architecture and system: Towards functionally elegant grand unification. Journal of Artificial General Intelligence, 7, 1-103.  

Rosenbloom, P. S., Demski, A. & Ustun, V. (2016). Rethinking Sigma’s graphical architecture: An extension to neural networks.  Proceedings of the 9th Conference on Artificial General Intelligence (pp. 84-94).  

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jeudi 12 octobre 2023
10 h 30

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UQAM - Pavillon Président-Kennedy (PK)
PK-5115 et en ligne
201, avenue du Président-Kennedy
Montréal (QC)

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