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Course Overview

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Title: Course Overview


1
Course Overview
  • What is AI?
  • What are the Major Challenges?
  • What are the Main Techniques?
  • Where are we failing, and why?
  • Step back and look at the Science
  • Step back and look at the History of AI
  • What are the Major Schools of Thought?
  • What of the Future?

?Done
Part IIGive you an appreciation for the big
picture ? Why it is a grand challenge
2
Course Overview
  • What is AI?
  • What are the Major Challenges?
  • What are the Main Techniques?
  • Where are we failing, and why?
  • Step back and look at the Science
  • Step back and look at the History of AI
  • What are the Major Schools of Thought?
  • What of the Future?

?Done
Part IIGive you an appreciation for the big
picture ? Why it is a grand challenge
3
Course Overview
  • What is AI?
  • What are the Major Challenges?
  • What are the Main Techniques?
  • Where are we failing, and why?
  • Step back and look at the Science
  • Step back and look at the History of AI
  • What are the Major Schools of Thought?
  • What of the Future?
  • Looking at the Science
  • Engineering vs. Science
  • Introduction to Cognitive Science
  • Cognitive Psychology 1
  • Cognitive Psychology 2
  • Cognitive Development
  • Linguistics
  • Neuroscience
  • Philosophy

4
Course Overview
  • What is AI?
  • What are the Major Challenges?
  • What are the Main Techniques?
  • Where are we failing, and why?
  • Step back and look at the Science
  • Step back and look at the History of AI
  • What are the Major Schools of Thought?
  • What of the Future?
  • Looking at the Science
  • Engineering vs. Science
  • Introduction to Cognitive Science
  • Cognitive Psychology 1
  • Cognitive Psychology 2
  • Cognitive Development
  • Linguistics
  • Neuroscience
  • Philosophy

5
How are Concepts Defined?
  • Classical Theory define necessary and sufficient
    conditions
  • Grandmother a female who has a child who has a
    child
  • Likely properties are neglected grey hair, old
  • Difficulties
  • Not so realistic perhaps
  • We dont have a clear idea of conditions for most
    concepts
  • Old woman with adopted son who has children
  • Usually consider her a grandmother
  • Introspection suggests
  • We often classify using unnecessary features
  • Dogs 4 legs and barks
  • Even though a dog who has lost a leg, and lost
    his voice, is still a dog!
  • To be sure of dog we should
  • have a careful assessment of its morphology, or
    chromosomes
  • but this is not how we work

6
How are Concepts Defined?
  • Deficiencies in classical theory
  • Prototype approach
  • Cognitive Scientists move to a likelihood
    theory
  • Likelihood that a concept will have some
    characteristics
  • Likelihood that something is categorised as that
    concept
  • Members of a concept have Family Resemblance
  • Family Resemblance idea picks very typical
    features
  • Bird
  • Robin has very typical features
  • Flight, size, tendency to perch in branches, sing
  • Penguin does not
  • Methods to implement
  • Likelihood schema
  • Set up a schema with likely features,
  • and weights on importance
  • Or use Average of known examples

7
Evidence for Prototype Concepts
  • Experiment by Rosch and Mervis
  • Took categories
  • Fruit
  • Vegetables
  • Clothing
  • Furniture
  • Vehicles
  • Weapons
  • Subjects given 20 items that were instances of a
    category
  • Asked to list typical features
  • From subjects responses each item was given a
    family resemblance score
  • For each item One point for each feature also in
    another item
  • E.g. furniture chair scored highest, telephone
    lowest

8
Evidence for Prototype Concepts
  • Another experiment
  • Subjects given typical and atypical instances of
    a category
  • e.g. furniture chair, rug, table, telephone
  • Asked to rate them on a 1-7 typicality scale
  • Items with highest family resemblance score
    (from previous) given highest rating
  • Shows
  • having features in common with other members
    means more typical

9
Evidence for Prototype Concepts
  • Another experiment
  • Subjects given a category, and then instances
  • Asked if instance belongs yes or no
  • e.g.
  • Bird robin ? yes
  • Bird rabbit ? no
  • Items with highest family resemblance score had
    faster response
  • e.g.
  • Bird robin ? fast
  • Bird pigeon ? medium
  • Bird eagle ? medium
  • Bird chicken ? slow
  • Shows
  • having features in common with other members
    means more typical

10
How do we Choose Concepts
  • Rosch analysed features we use
  • Typical use
  • Visual shape
  • Suggests these characteristics constrain
    categories
  • Culture (use)
  • Visual system

11
How to Represent Concepts
  • Can use propositions as before
  • Proposition represents both the item and the
    concept
  • Example
  • Vegetable plant plant green
    bean edible edible fibrous fibrous
    green green main dish main dish long/thin
  • Put a weight on each link
  • to indicate how important it is to distinguish
    that concept
  • Check
  • how many overlapped paths
  • And how strong
  • To decide in green bean is a vegetable

12
Dynamic Theory of Concepts
  • Proposed by Barsalou 1993
  • When concepts retrieved in a certain context
  • Certain features are given prominence
  • Example thinking of concept cucumber
  • During Spring planting
  • During August dinner
  • Different features given prominence
  • Experimental evidence
  • Subjects were given a context with a sentence
    (priming)
  • Then asked if a feature was part of the concept
  • Results showed low-weight features could be
    boosted
  • Dynamic concepts
  • Means that your notion of the concept is changing
  • Depends on your current context

13
How to Learn the Concepts
  • For a prototype concept
  • Train a network with the examples that have been
    seen
  • Adjust the weights on the features on the concept
  • End up with a good average prototype
  • Problem
  • What about features like colour of a cow?
  • Seem to be set of possible colours
  • Not just any colour, but certain options

14
How to Learn the Concepts
  • Exemplar Approach
  • Alternative to prototype approach
  • Store all the examples
  • e.g. all known example of dog
  • When a new one comes along, see how well it
    matches known ones
  • dog-similarity value
  • Approach works well in lab tests
  • Better than prototype approach
  • Concern
  • Need to store so many examples,
  • and compare a new instance with each stored one
  • Could compare in parallel by neural network
  • but still a lot of storage

15
How to Learn the Concepts
  • Top down and bottom up processes
  • Seeing a fat man in a foreign country
  • You would not conclude that all men in that
    country are fat
  • Seeing a coin in a foreign country
  • You would conclude that all those coins would
    have that size
  • This is using some higher level knowledge
  • People seem to have theories of domains
  • Concepts seem to incorporate high level
    knowledgeas well as low level likely features
  • Proper theory of concepts may take some time

16
Cognitive Science Concepts and AI?
  • Sometimes the devil is in the details
  • It is easy to describe for some simple concepts
    and features
  • Describe a handful, and how they link in an
    associative network
  • but does not scale up for a great number of
    concepts
  • Number of features seems infeasible
  • Example Barsalou has can be walked on as a
    feature of roof
  • Imagine how many features roof has if we want to
    go to this level of explanation
  • When it comes to connecting to the world
  • Not clear how to do it
  • Even recognising the most basic things is beyond
    vision systems
  • A chair
  • Unless constrained to particular types/lighting
    etc.
  • Recognising most basic concepts from language
    also problematic
  • Concepts most interesting in toy demonstrations
  • Conclusion Cognitive Science Concepts
    interesting
  • Clearly reveals some insight on how mind works
  • But still a big gap between them and AI systems

17
Memory
  • We will focus on declarative memory
  • i.e. think of declare some fact to be true
  • We already talked about procedural memory
  • Skill acquisition play musical instrument, ride
    a bicycle
  • Psychologists consider three stages for memory
  • Acquisition
  • Retention interval
  • Seconds, minutes, years
  • Retrieval
  • Short-term / long-term
  • Think of difference between your own phone number
  • And one you remember just long enough to dial
  • Experiment
  • Subjects asked to try rehearsal or
    elaboration
  • Rehearsal was good for short-term recall
  • Elaboration was good for long-term recall
  • Why?

18
Memory
  • If subjects do deeper processing
  • have better long-term memory recall
  • Experiment
  • Is the word in capital letters? table TABLE
  • Does the word rhyme with weight? crate MARKET
  • Is the word a type of fish? SHARK heaven
  • Would the word fit this sentence FRIEND cloudHe
    met a _____ in the street
  • Subjects answered 40 questions on different words
  • Result words where the question required deeper
    processing were remembered better
  • Also experimented with higher complexity
    sentence questions
  • Even better memory
  • Interesting intention to remember does not help!
  • Another experiment
  • Some subjects told they need to remember
  • Others told they just need to answer quickly,
    then given surprise memory test at end

19
Memory - Elaborations
  • In terms of propositional associative networks
  • Elaboration activates more connected nodes
  • If you forget the main part, the associated
    activations might activate it
  • Some elaborations produce better memory effects
    than others
  • Bradshaw and Anderson showed cause and effect
    effective
  • Mozart made a long journey from Munich to Paris
  • Cause Mozart wanted to leave Munich to avoid a
    romantic entanglement
  • Effect Mozart was inspired by Parisian musical
    life
  • Downside of elaborations
  • Subjects often remember things that werent there
  • After 24 hours
  • Subjects recalled 1 incorrect elaboration for
    every 2 propositions in the story
  • Relevant to witness testimony
  • Watergate John Dean misattributed statements to
    people
  • Subjects shown film of car crash
  • Asked how fast were they going when they
    smashed into each other? how fast were they
    going when they hit each other?
  • First group more likely to have seen broken
    glass

20
Reasoning
  • Remember deduction from the AI part on logic?
  • IF a guy is tall THEN Mary likes the guy
  • John is a tall guy-------------------------------
    ----------------------
  • Mary must like John
  • Do humans really use logical deduction?
  • Experiment Four cards
  • E K 4 7
  • IF a vowel on one side THEN must be an even
    number on other side
  • High rate of error
  • But performed better if detecting cheating
    involved
  • Deductive model should not depend on content
  • Why are humans so bad at logical reasoning?
  • Human thought more heuristic works most of the
    time

21
Course Overview
  • What is AI?
  • What are the Major Challenges?
  • What are the Main Techniques?
  • Where are we failing, and why?
  • Step back and look at the Science
  • Step back and look at the History of AI
  • What are the Major Schools of Thought?
  • What of the Future?
  • Looking at the Science
  • Engineering vs. Science
  • Introduction to Cognitive Science
  • Cognitive Psychology 1
  • Cognitive Psychology 2
  • Cognitive Development
  • Linguistics
  • Neuroscience
  • Philosophy
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