5,784 research outputs found
Quantum Interaction Approach in Cognition, Artificial Intelligence and Robotics
The mathematical formalism of quantum mechanics has been successfully
employed in the last years to model situations in which the use of classical
structures gives rise to problematical situations, and where typically quantum
effects, such as 'contextuality' and 'entanglement', have been recognized. This
'Quantum Interaction Approach' is briefly reviewed in this paper focusing, in
particular, on the quantum models that have been elaborated to describe how
concepts combine in cognitive science, and on the ensuing identification of a
quantum structure in human thought. We point out that these results provide
interesting insights toward the development of a unified theory for meaning and
knowledge formalization and representation. Then, we analyze the technological
aspects and implications of our approach, and a particular attention is devoted
to the connections with symbolic artificial intelligence, quantum computation
and robotics.Comment: 10 page
A design for a reusable Ada library
A goal of the Ada language standardization effort is to promote reuse of software, implying the existence of substantial software libraries and the storage/retrieval mechanisms to support them. A searching/cataloging mechanism is proposed that permits full or partial distribution of the database, adapts to a variety of searching mechanisms, permits a changine taxonomy with minimal disruption, and minimizes the requirement of specialized cataloger/indexer skills. The important observation is that key words serve not only as indexing mechanism, but also as an identification mechanism, especially via concatenation and as support for a searching mechanism. By deliberately separating these multiple uses, the modifiability and ease of growth that current libraries require, is achieved
Logical and uncertainty models for information access: current trends
The current trends of research in information access as emerged from the 1999 Workshop on Logical and Uncertainty Models for Information Systems (LUMIS'99) are briefly reviewed in this paper. We believe that some of these issues will be central to future research on theory and applications of logical and uncertainty models for information access
The Mirror DBMS at TREC-8
The database group at University of Twente participates in TREC8 using the Mirror DBMS, a prototype database system especially designed for multimedia and web retrieval. From a database perspective, the purpose has been to check whether we can get sufficient performance, and to prepare for the very large corpus track in which we plan to participate next year. From an IR perspective, the experiments have been designed to learn more about the effect of the global statistics on the ranking
The Most Influential Paper Gerard Salton Never Wrote
Gerard Salton is often credited with developing the vector space model
(VSM) for information retrieval (IR). Citations to Salton give the impression
that the VSM must have been articulated as an IR model sometime between
1970 and 1975. However, the VSM as it is understood today evolved over a
longer time period than is usually acknowledged, and an articulation of the
model and its assumptions did not appear in print until several years after
those assumptions had been criticized and alternative models proposed. An
often cited overview paper titled ???A Vector Space Model for Information
Retrieval??? (alleged to have been published in 1975) does not exist, and
citations to it represent a confusion of two 1975 articles, neither of which
were overviews of the VSM as a model of information retrieval. Until the
late 1970s, Salton did not present vector spaces as models of IR generally
but rather as models of specifi c computations. Citations to the phantom
paper refl ect an apparently widely held misconception that the operational
features and explanatory devices now associated with the VSM must have
been introduced at the same time it was fi rst proposed as an IR model.published or submitted for publicatio
Looking at Vector Space and Language Models for IR using Density Matrices
In this work, we conduct a joint analysis of both Vector Space and Language
Models for IR using the mathematical framework of Quantum Theory. We shed light
on how both models allocate the space of density matrices. A density matrix is
shown to be a general representational tool capable of leveraging capabilities
of both VSM and LM representations thus paving the way for a new generation of
retrieval models. We analyze the possible implications suggested by our
findings.Comment: In Proceedings of Quantum Interaction 201
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