One can imagine a neural net with similar inputs and outputs but different 
depths of hidden layers inhibiting & exciting internal neurons of the network.  
These would represent relevant contrastable features tied to previous similar 
experiences.  Together they'd compete to activate one or several neurons that 
correspond to one or several registrations.   

A lack of experience with ambiguity in inputs would be one explanation why 
premature registration would occur.  [Naïve agents]   Another might be no 
particular pressure to distinguish similar categories -- no cost for bad 
predictions -- so no reinforcement of connections to other neurons.  [Unengaged 
agent]  Another might be that training had occurred on similar but distinct 
data and re-training wasn't believed to be needed -- the learner had been 
educated in a curriculum-based (programmed) way and believed that the features 
in the environment were easier to contrast than they really were.  [Smug agent] 
Finally, there's the no neurons available possibility... [Disabled agent]

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of glen ?
Sent: Wednesday, June 14, 2017 2:43 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] sometimes an onion is just an onion...


On 06/14/2017 01:29 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> The meaning is clear, but is this a term that is used in particular 
> communities?   The reason I ask is that I deal with people all that time that 
> do this, and I'd like to be able to whack a book over their head, since  they 
> like to do that to others.

On 06/12/2017 10:39 AM, glen ☣ wrote:
> Cf Brian Cantwell Smith in: 
> https://global.oup.com/academic/product/philosophy-of-mental-represent
> ation-9780198250524?cc=us&lang=en&

It's not clear to me how common the usage is.  In B.C. Smith's "On the Origin 
of Objects", he calls it "inscription error" instead.  In the book cited above, 
he states that he prefers "premature registration", mainly because it applies 
not only to programming/inscribing, but to things like what happened in this 
discussion (where Nick and Steve prematurely clamped on an onion metaphor I 
didn't intend).  I still prefer inscription error when I use it in a simulation 
context because the meaning is more clear.  In logic or rhetorical contexts, 
the standard "petitio principii" still works.


--
☣ glen

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