Hello PM,

here is a sketchy answer.
What do you think?
----
As an abstract model, situational representation would have the following
features:
   Situation is a super-class of Event and State.
   A situation is associated with time and place (location).
   A situation is associated with its participants.
   A situation is associated with attributes and relations of the participants.

In the brain, the representation of non-present situations is
'imagined.'  Imagined representation is somehow distinguished
from sensory (actual/present) representation.
Representation of non-present situations should be composed of imagined 
parts.

The neural representation of some situation is associated with another 
as relevant.
If the Bayesian brain hypothesis (or similar one) is correct, 
the relevance is measured by some probabily theory.
----

-- AN

2014/04/28 15:35、Piaget Modeler <[email protected]> wrote:

> How do we form situations in our mind?
> 
> Some may be actual, hypothetical, or anticipatory.
> 
> How would you model situations?
> 
> Assuming that we have millions of them to choose from, how 
> do we ignore irrelevant situations and work with relevant ones? 
> 
> I have some theories, but I'd like to hear your thoughts? 
> 
> ~PM



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AGI
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