Thanks for the Assad Analogy that's creative. 
New thread for this topic:  Internal Representations.  See my responses there.
Cheers.

~PM.
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [agi] Deb Roy: The Birth of a Word
Date: Tue, 4 Dec 2012 09:36:41 +0000







PM: “Any representation would 
do for me actually, as long as it gets 
results.”
 
How are you going to have “any” representation of a 
“hand” and a “box” or “hammer”, if you want your hand to handle that box or 
hammer – if you really want results?
 
“Any” representation of a concept won’t 
do.   Concepts are means for grasping – and taking action on - reality 
and real objects. Their representations are tied to reality as sketch maps 
(.e.g 
crude treasure meaps) are and have to be tied to, and reflect,  reality, in 
order to secure real goals.
 
The no-necessary-connection-with-reality concept of 
concepts you are implicitly advancing (wh. also underlies similar concepts like 
semantic pointers and graphs) is as beleaguered and doomed as Assad in 
Syria.
 




From: Piaget Modeler 
Sent: Tuesday, December 04, 2012 7:50 AM
To: AGI 

Subject: RE: [agi] Deb Roy: The Birth of a Word
 

The way I view it these days is that a particular set of schemes 
(or solutions as I call them) 
are activated and differentiated over this 
time period:  the period it takes for "gaa" to 
transform into "water" during sessions of primary circular reactions 
(the infant hearing 
his own voice and deciding to have it match his caregiver's 
pronunciation) or secondary 
circular reactions (the infant getting the caregiver to say "water"). 

 
For me knowing the brain's internal representation would be helpful, but is 
not necessary,
as long as a program can mimic the output 
using its own internal representation.  I can 
use my own straw man representation and see 
if that works. Any representation would 
do for me actually, as long as it gets 
results.


~PM

 



Date: Mon, 3 Dec 2012 19:46:56 -0500
Subject: Re: [agi] Deb Roy: The Birth of 
a Word
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]


But that length of time does not carry over during subsequent learning in 
an obvious way.  
It does take time to learn to speak with the amount of insight that adults 
can use in conversation
but some kinds of learning, which should be of interest to us, can be 
accomplished very quickly 
after some initial words have been learned.  
 
Unfortunately, studies on childhood learning do not provide very much 
insight about how the
internal representation of ideas proceeds.
 
Jim Bromer
 
 
On Mon, Dec 3, 2012 at 5:15 PM, Piaget Modeler <[email protected]> 
wrote:
>
> For me what was most interesting was the amount of time a child needed 
to differentiate one phonetic 
> sequence into another.
> Cheers,
>
> ~PM
 
 
 


  
  
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