The goose, the fly, and the submarine navigator: The case for interdisciplinarity in artificial cognition research (2007)
Alexander Riegler
In: Loula, A., Gudwin, R. & Queiroz, J. (eds.) Artificial cognition systems. Idea Group Publishing: Hershey, PA, pp. 1-26. Reprinted in: Sugumaran, V. (ed.) (2008) Intelligent information technologies, pp. 1636-1657
Interdisciplinary research provides inspirations and insights on how a variety of disciplines can contribute to the formulation of an alternative path to artificial cognition systems. It is suggested how results from ethology, evolutionary theory, and epistemology can be condensed into four boundary conditions. They lead to the outline of an architecture for genuine cognitive systems, which seeks to overcome traditional problems known from artificial intelligence research. Two major points are stressed: (a) The maintenance of explanatory power by favoring an advanced rule-based system rather than neuronal systems, and (b) the organizational closure of the cognitive apparatus, which has far-reaching implications for the creation of meaningful agents.
@inbook{Riegler42,
author = {Riegler A.},
title = {The goose, the fly, and the submarine navigator: The case for interdisciplinarity in artificial cognition research},
year = {2007},
URL = {https://constructivist.info/riegler/42},
editor = {Loula, A and Gudwin, R. and Queiroz, J.}
booktitle = {Artificial cognition systems}
publisher = {Idea Group Publishing}
place = {Hershey, PA}
pages = {1--26}
}
%0 Book Section
%A Riegler A.
%T The goose, the fly, and the submarine navigator: The case for interdisciplinarity in artificial cognition research
%D 2007
%U https://constructivist.info/riegler/42
%E Loula, A
%E Gudwin, R.
%E Queiroz, J.
%B Artificial cognition systems
%I Idea Group Publishing
%C Hershey, PA
%P 1-26
%X Interdisciplinary research provides inspirations and insights on how a variety of disciplines can contribute to the formulation of an alternative path to artificial cognition systems. It is suggested how results from ethology, evolutionary theory, and epistemology can be condensed into four boundary conditions. They lead to the outline of an architecture for genuine cognitive systems, which seeks to overcome traditional problems known from artificial intelligence research. Two major points are stressed: (a) The maintenance of explanatory power by favoring an advanced rule-based system rather than neuronal systems, and (b) the organizational closure of the cognitive apparatus, which has far-reaching implications for the creation of meaningful agents.
%2 artificial intelligence
PT - CHAP
A1 - Riegler A.
T1 - The goose, the fly, and the submarine navigator: The case for interdisciplinarity in artificial cognition research
Y1 - 2007
UR - https://constructivist.info/riegler/42
AB - Interdisciplinary research provides inspirations and insights on how a variety of disciplines can contribute to the formulation of an alternative path to artificial cognition systems. It is suggested how results from ethology, evolutionary theory, and epistemology can be condensed into four boundary conditions. They lead to the outline of an architecture for genuine cognitive systems, which seeks to overcome traditional problems known from artificial intelligence research. Two major points are stressed: (a) The maintenance of explanatory power by favoring an advanced rule-based system rather than neuronal systems, and (b) the organizational closure of the cognitive apparatus, which has far-reaching implications for the creation of meaningful agents.
ER -
Riegler A. (2007) The goose, the fly, and the submarine navigator: The case for interdisciplinarity in artificial cognition research. In: Loula, A., Gudwin, R. & Queiroz, J. (eds.) Artificial cognition systems. Idea Group Publishing: Hershey, PA, pp. 1–26. Reprinted in: Sugumaran, V. (ed.) (2008) Intelligent information technologies, pp. 1636–1657. Available at https://constructivist.info/riegler/42