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While it is fashionable today to dismiss the "bad old days" of
artificial intelligence and rave about emergent self-organizing
systems, Robert French has created a model of human analogy-making
that attempts to bridge the gap between classical top-down AI and more
recent bottom-up approaches.
The research described in this book is based on the premise that human
analogy-making is an extension of our constant background process of
perceiving -- in other words, that analogy-making and the perception
of sameness are two sides of the same coin. At the heart of the
author's theory and computer model of analogy-making is the idea that
the building-up and the manipulation of representations are
inseparable aspects of mental functioning, in contrast to traditional
AI models of high-level cognitive processes, which have almost always
depended on a clean separation.
A computer program called Tabletop forms analogies in a microdomain
consisting of everyday objects on a table set for a meal. The theory
and the program rely on the idea that myriad stochastic choices made
on the microlevel can add up to statistical robustness on a
macrolevel. To illustrate this, French includes the results of
thousands of runs of his program on several dozen interrelated analogy
problems in the Tabletop microworld.
French's work is exciting not only because it reveals analogy-making
to be an extension of our complex and subtle ability to perceive
sameness but also because it offers a computational model of
mechanisms underlying these processes. This model makes significant
strides in putting into practice microlevel stochastic processing,
distributed processing, simulated parallelism, and the integration of
representation-building and representation-processing.
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