Constructivist artificial life: The constructivist-anticipatory principle and functional coupling (1994)
Alexander Riegler
In: Hopf, J. (ed.) Proceedings of the 18th German conference on artificial intelligence (KI-94). Workshop on genetic algorithms within the framework of evolutionary computation. Max-Planck-Institute Report No. MPI-I-94-241, pp. 73-83
Both the system theory of evolution and the epistemology of radical constructivism provide fertile inspiration for enhancements of artificial life. Within this paper I will demonstrate that (a) one can move the emphasis on sensory information processing to a more expectation-driven algorithm; and (b) that a separation between the operational closed brain on the one hand and sensors and motor elements on the other hand will enable the study of cognitive mechanisms independent of the actual environment.
@inproceedings{Riegler2,
author = {Riegler A.},
title = {Constructivist artificial life: The constructivist-anticipatory principle and functional coupling},
year = {1994},
URL = {https://constructivist.info/riegler/2},
editor = {Hopf, J.}
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 18th German conference on artificial intelligence (KI-94). Workshop on genetic algorithms within the framework of evolutionary computation. Max-Planck-Institute Report No. MPI-I-94--241, pp. 73--83}
publisher = {}
place = {}
}
%0 Conference Paper
%A Riegler A.
%T Constructivist artificial life: The constructivist-anticipatory principle and functional coupling
%D 1994
%U https://constructivist.info/riegler/2
%E Hopf, J.
%B Proceedings of the 18th German conference on artificial intelligence (KI-94). Workshop on genetic algorithms within the framework of evolutionary computation. Max-Planck-Institute Report No. MPI-I-94–241, pp. 73–83
%I
%C
%X Both the system theory of evolution and the epistemology of radical constructivism provide fertile inspiration for enhancements of artificial life. Within this paper I will demonstrate that (a) one can move the emphasis on sensory information processing to a more expectation-driven algorithm; and (b) that a separation between the operational closed brain on the one hand and sensors and motor elements on the other hand will enable the study of cognitive mechanisms independent of the actual environment.
%2 constructivism
PT - CHAP
A1 - Riegler A.
T1 - Constructivist artificial life: The constructivist-anticipatory principle and functional coupling
Y1 - 1994
UR - https://constructivist.info/riegler/2
AB - Both the system theory of evolution and the epistemology of radical constructivism provide fertile inspiration for enhancements of artificial life. Within this paper I will demonstrate that (a) one can move the emphasis on sensory information processing to a more expectation-driven algorithm; and (b) that a separation between the operational closed brain on the one hand and sensors and motor elements on the other hand will enable the study of cognitive mechanisms independent of the actual environment.
ER -
Riegler A. (1994) Constructivist artificial life: The constructivist-anticipatory principle and functional coupling. In: Hopf, J. (ed.) Proceedings of the 18th German conference on artificial intelligence (KI-94). Workshop on genetic algorithms within the framework of evolutionary computation. Max-Planck-Institute Report No. MPI-I-94–241, pp. 73–83. Available at https://constructivist.info/riegler/2