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ICALP
1998
Springer

A Neuroidal Architecture for Cognitive Computation

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A Neuroidal Architecture for Cognitive Computation
An architecture is described for designing systems that acquire and manipulate large amounts of unsystematized, or so-called commonsense, knowledge. Its aim is to exploit to the full those aspects of computational learning that are known to offer powerful solutions in the acquisition and maintenance of robust knowledge bases. The architecture makes explicit the requirements on the basic computational tasks that are to be performed and is designed to make these computationally tractable even for very large databases. The main claims are that (i) the basic learning and deduction tasks are provably tractable and (ii) tractable learning offers viable approaches to a range of issues that have been previously identified as problematic for artificial intelligence systems that are programmed. Among the issues that learning offers to resolve are robustness to inconsistencies, robustness to incomplete information and resolving among alternatives. Attribute-efficient learning algorithms, which al...
Leslie G. Valiant
Added 24 Aug 2010
Updated 24 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 1998
Where ICALP
Authors Leslie G. Valiant
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