Conceptual Commitments of the LIDA Model of Cognition

Author:

Franklin Stan1,Strain Steve1,McCall Ryan1,Baars Bernard2

Affiliation:

1. Fedex Institute of Technology 301, The University of Memphis, TN 38152, USA

2. 6615 Fisher Ave. Falls Church, VA 22046, USA

Abstract

Abstract Significant debate on fundamental issues remains in the subfields of cognitive science, including perception, memory, attention, action selection, learning, and others. Psychology, neuroscience, and artificial intelligence each contribute alternative and sometimes conflicting perspectives on the supervening problem of artificial general intelligence (AGI). Current efforts toward a broad-based, systems-level model of minds cannot await theoretical convergence in each of the relevant subfields. Such work therefore requires the formulation of tentative hypotheses, based on current knowledge, that serve to connect cognitive functions into a theoretical framework for the study of the mind. We term such hypotheses “conceptual commitments” and describe the hypotheses underlying one such model, the Learning Intelligent Distribution Agent (LIDA) Model. Our intention is to initiate a discussion among AGI researchers about which conceptual commitments are essential, or particularly useful, toward creating AGI agents.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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