3 research outputs found

    Expérience comportementale et modélisation par réseau neuronal des différences entre les processus de catégorisation par règles logiques et par ressemblance familiale

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    Notre étude est bipartite. En premier lieu nous avons effectué une étude empirique des différences entre les processus de catégorisation explicite (verbalisable) et implicite (non-verbalisable). Nous avons examiné la difficulté et le temps nécessaire pour apprendre trois tâches de catégorisation dites par air de famille, par règle logique conjonctive et par règle logique disjonctive. Nous avons ensuite utilisé un réseau neuronal pour modéliser la catégorisation en lui faisant compléter les mêmes tâches. La comparaison entre les deux nous permet de juger de l’adéquation du modèle. Les données empiriques ont montré un effet de la typicité et de la familiarité en accord avec la documentation et nous trouvons que la tâche de catégorisation par règle disjonctive est la plus difficile alors que la tâche de catégorisation par air de famille est la plus facile. La modélisation par le réseau est une réussite partielle mais nous présentons des solutions afin qu’un réseau futur puisse modéliser le processus catégoriel humain efficacementOur present research was twofold. First, we conducted a study of the differences in the categorization processes between explicit (verbalizable) and implicit (nonverbalizable) tasks. The differentiation was done in term of difficulty and time necessary to learn the rule of the category for family resemblance, conjunctive and disjunctive rules. We then used a neural network to model the categorization and had it complete the same tasks. The comparison between the two gave us insight into how (and if) the network can be used as a model of human categorization. The empirical data confirmed an effect of familiarity and typicality, as supported by previous studies, and we confirmed that the disjunctive task was the hardest to learn for humans while our results point toward the family resemblance task as being the easiest. The modelization by the neural network was partially successful at best but we present options that could permit a next generation neural network to model the categorization process truthfull

    Brain Computations and Connectivity [2nd edition]

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    This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read on the Oxford Academic platform and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations. Brain Computations and Connectivity is about how the brain works. In order to understand this, it is essential to know what is computed by different brain systems; and how the computations are performed. The aim of this book is to elucidate what is computed in different brain systems; and to describe current biologically plausible computational approaches and models of how each of these brain systems computes. Understanding the brain in this way has enormous potential for understanding ourselves better in health and in disease. Potential applications of this understanding are to the treatment of the brain in disease; and to artificial intelligence which will benefit from knowledge of how the brain performs many of its extraordinarily impressive functions. This book is pioneering in taking this approach to brain function: to consider what is computed by many of our brain systems; and how it is computed, and updates by much new evidence including the connectivity of the human brain the earlier book: Rolls (2021) Brain Computations: What and How, Oxford University Press. Brain Computations and Connectivity will be of interest to all scientists interested in brain function and how the brain works, whether they are from neuroscience, or from medical sciences including neurology and psychiatry, or from the area of computational science including machine learning and artificial intelligence, or from areas such as theoretical physics
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