Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Recognizing Variable Environments : The Theory of Cognitive Prism - Tiansi Dong

Recognizing Variable Environments

The Theory of Cognitive Prism

By: Tiansi Dong

Hardcover | 19 October 2011

At a Glance

Hardcover


$185.90

or 4 interest-free payments of $46.48 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 7 business days

Normal adults do not have any difficulty in recognizing their homes. But can artificial systems do in the same way as humans? This book collects interdisciplinary evidences and presents an answer from the perspective of computing, namely, the theory of cognitive prism. To recognize an environment, an intelligent system only needs to classify objects, structures them based on the connection relation (not through measuring!), subjectively orders the objects, and compares with the target environment, whose knowledge is similarly structured. The intelligent system works, therefore, like a prism: when a beam of light (a scene) reaches (is perceived) to an optical prism (by an intelligent system), some light (objects) is reflected (are neglected), those passed through (the recognized objects) are distorted (are ordered differently). So comes the term 'cognitive prism'! Two fundamental propositions used in the theory can be informally stated as follow: an orientation relation is a kind of distance comparison relation -- you being in front of me means you being nearer to my face than to my other sides; a pair of objects being connected means any object, precisely the space occupied by the object, can be moved to a place where it connects with the pair.

More in Artificial Intelligence

AI for Business : A Guide to AI Adoption - Jon Whittle

RRP $49.99

$40.75

18%
OFF
Creative Machines : AI, Art & Us - Maya Ackerman

RRP $57.95

$44.75

23%
OFF
New Beginnings : why change is so difficult and how to achieve it - Stefan Klein
The Tech Coup : How to Save Democracy from Silicon Valley - Marietje Schaake
The Shortest History of AI - Toby Walsh

RRP $27.99

$22.75

19%
OFF
Genesis : Artificial Intelligence, Hope, and the Human Spirit - Eric Schmidt
Artificial Intelligence : A Modern Approach, 4th Global Edition - Peter Norvig
Life 3.0 : Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence - Max Tegmark
How We Learn : The New Science of Education and the Brain - Stanislas Dehaene
Handbook of Reinforcement Learning - Todd Mcmullen
Current Trends in Automated Reasoning - Erika Bach