Clancey, William J. (1994) Comment on diSessa. [Journal (Paginated)]
Full text available as:
HTML
16Kb |
Abstract
In the predominant symbolic approach of AI in the 1970s and early 80s, a descriptionsuch as an expert system rule, frame, script, or natural language grammarwas often called a "knowledge representation." Knowledge was viewed as something that could be inventoried. Human memory was modeled as a repository of knowledge representations. Arguments that "there are no knowledge representations in the brain," were then misinterpreted in this community as "throwing the baby out with the bathwater."
Item Type: | Journal (Paginated) |
---|---|
Keywords: | symbol systems, memory, representations, situated cognition, cognitive modeling |
Subjects: | Psychology > Cognitive Psychology Computer Science > Artificial Intelligence Psychology > Developmental Psychology Philosophy > Epistemology |
ID Code: | 453 |
Deposited By: | Clancey, Bill |
Deposited On: | 09 Jun 1998 |
Last Modified: | 11 Mar 2011 08:53 |
Metadata
- ASCII Citation
- Atom
- BibTeX
- Dublin Core
- EP3 XML
- EPrints Application Profile (experimental)
- EndNote
- HTML Citation
- ID Plus Text Citation
- JSON
- METS
- MODS
- MPEG-21 DIDL
- OpenURL ContextObject
- OpenURL ContextObject in Span
- RDF+N-Triples
- RDF+N3
- RDF+XML
- Refer
- Reference Manager
- Search Data Dump
- Simple Metadata
- YAML
Repository Staff Only: item control page