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The emergence of choice: Decision-making and strategic thinking through analogies

Linhares, Dr Alexandre (2013) The emergence of choice: Decision-making and strategic thinking through analogies. [Preprint]

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Abstract

Consider the chess game: When faced with a complex scenario, how does understanding arise in one’s mind? How does one integrate disparate cues into a global, meaningful whole? how do humans avoid the combinatorial explosion? How are abstract ideas represented? The purpose of this paper is to propose a new computational model of human chess intuition and intelligence. We suggest that analogies and abstract roles are crucial to solving these landmark problems. We present a proof-of-concept model, in the form of a computational architecture, which may be able to account for many crucial aspects of human intuition, such as (i) concentration of attention to relevant aspects, (ii) how humans may avoid the combinatorial explosion, (iii) perception of similarity at a strategic level, and (iv) a state of meaningful anticipation over how a global scenario may evolve.

Item Type:Preprint
Keywords:perception, problem-solving, chess, cognitive-science, artificial-intelligence, abstract thought
Subjects:Psychology > Perceptual Cognitive Psychology
Psychology > Cognitive Psychology
Electronic Publishing > Peer Review
Computer Science > Artificial Intelligence
Computer Science > Machine Vision
ID Code:9075
Deposited By: Linhares, Dr Alexandre
Deposited On:18 Nov 2013 21:03
Last Modified:18 Nov 2013 21:03

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References in Article

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