2 research outputs found
A Comparison of Different Cognitive Paradigms Using Simple Animats in a Virtual Laboratory, with Implications to the Notion of Cognition
In this thesis I present a virtual laboratory which implements five different models for controlling animats: a rule-based system, a behaviour-based system, a concept-based system, a neural network, and a Braitenberg architecture. Through different experiments, I compare the performance of the models and conclude that there is no best model, since different models are better for different things in different contexts. The models I chose, although quite simple, represent different approaches for studying cognition. Using the results as an empirical philosophical aid, I note that there is no best approach for studying cognition, since different approaches have all advantages and disadvantages, because they study different aspects of cognition from different contexts. This has implications for current debates on proper approaches for cognition: all approaches are a bit proper, but none will be proper enough. I draw remarks on the notion of cognition abstracting from all the approaches used to study it, and propose a simple classification for different types of cognition
Artificial Societies of Intelligent Agents
In this thesis we present our work, where we developed artificial societies of intelligent agents, in order to understand
and simulate adaptive behaviour and social processes. We obtain this in three parallel ways: First, we present a
behaviours production system capable of reproducing a high number of properties of adaptive behaviour and of
exhibiting emergent lower cognition. Second, we introduce a simple model for social action, obtaining emergent
complex social processes from simple interactions of imitation and induction of behaviours in agents. And third, we
present our approximation to a behaviours virtual laboratory, integrating our behaviours production system and our
social action model in animats. In our behaviours virtual laboratory, the user can perform a wide variety of
experiments, allowing him or her to test the properties of our behaviours production system and our social action
model, and also to understand adaptive and social behaviour. It can be accessed and downloaded through the Internet.
Before presenting our proposals, we make an introduction to artificial intelligence and behaviour-based systems, and
also we give notions of complex systems and artificial societies. In the last chapter of the thesis, we present
experiments carried out in our behaviours virtual laboratory showing the main properties of our behaviours
production system, of our social action model, and of our behaviours virtual laboratory itself. Finally, we discuss
about the understanding of adaptive behaviour as a path for understanding cognition and its evolution