1,279 research outputs found
Minds Online: The Interface between Web Science, Cognitive Science, and the Philosophy of Mind
Alongside existing research into the social, political and economic impacts of the Web, there is a need to study the Web from a cognitive and epistemic perspective. This is particularly so as new and emerging technologies alter the nature of our interactive engagements with the Web, transforming the extent to which our thoughts and actions are shaped by the online environment. Situated and ecological approaches to cognition are relevant to understanding the cognitive significance of the Web because of the emphasis they place on forces and factors that reside at the level of agentâworld interactions. In particular, by adopting a situated or ecological approach to cognition, we are able to assess the significance of the Web from the perspective of research into embodied, extended, embedded, social and collective cognition. The results of this analysis help to reshape the interdisciplinary configuration of Web Science, expanding its theoretical and empirical remit to include the disciplines of both cognitive science and the philosophy of mind
Outline of a new approach to the nature of mind
I propose a new approach to the constitutive problem of psychology âwhat is mind?â The first section introduces modifications of the received scope, methodology, and evaluation criteria of unified theories of cognition in accordance with the requirements of evolutionary compatibility and of a mature science. The second section outlines the proposed theory. Its first part provides empirically verifiable conditions delineating the class of meaningful neural formations and modifies accordingly the traditional conceptions of meaning, concept and thinking. This analysis is part of a theory of communication in terms of inter-level systems of primitives that proposes the communication-understanding principle as a psychological invariance. It unifies a substantial amount of research by systematizing the notions of meaning, thinking, concept, belief, communication, and understanding and leads to a minimum vocabulary for this core system of mental phenomena. Its second part argues that written human language is the key characteristic of the artificially natural human mind. Overall, the theory both supports Darwinâs continuity hypothesis and proposes that the mental gap is within our own species
Apperceptive patterning: Artefaction, extensional beliefs and cognitive scaffolding
In âPsychopower and Ordinary Madnessâ my ambition, as it relates to Bernard Stieglerâs recent literature, was twofold: 1) critiquing Stieglerâs work on exosomatization and artefactual posthumanismâor, more specifically, nonhumanismâto problematize approaches to media archaeology that rely upon technical exteriorization; 2) challenging how Stiegler engages with Giuseppe Longo and Francis Baillyâs conception of negative entropy. These efforts were directed by a prevalent techno-cultural qualifier: the rise of Synthetic Intelligence (including neural nets, deep learning, predictive processing and Bayesian models of cognition). This paper continues this project but first directs a critical analytic lens at the Derridean practice of the ontologization of grammatization from which Stiegler emerges while also distinguishing how metalanguages operate in relation to object-oriented environmental interaction by way of inferentialism. Stalking continental (Kapp, Simondon, Leroi-Gourhan, etc.) and analytic traditions (e.g., Carnap, Chalmers, Clark, Sutton, Novaes, etc.), we move from artefacts to AI and Predictive Processing so as to link theories related to technicity with philosophy of mind. Simultaneously drawing forth Robert Brandomâs conceptualization of the roles that commitments play in retrospectively reconstructing the social experiences that lead to our endorsement(s) of norms, we compliment this account with Reza Negarestaniâs deprivatized account of intelligence while analyzing the equipollent role between language and media (both digital and analog)
Design: One, but in different forms
This overview paper defends an augmented cognitively oriented generic-design
hypothesis: there are both significant similarities between the design
activities implemented in different situations and crucial differences between
these and other cognitive activities; yet, characteristics of a design
situation (related to the design process, the designers, and the artefact)
introduce specificities in the corresponding cognitive activities and
structures that are used, and in the resulting designs. We thus augment the
classical generic-design hypothesis with that of different forms of designing.
We review the data available in the cognitive design research literature and
propose a series of candidates underlying such forms of design, outlining a
number of directions requiring further elaboration
Distributed Social Multi-Agent Negotiation Framework For Incomplete Information Games
In this paper, we propose a social negotiation system in which agents can communicate and interact with each other socially throughout a Sheriff of Nottingham game. We address issues with the number of options available while negotiating, particularly when bluffing is involved. Experiments are proposed that would allow us to validate how closely this framework mirrors real social interaction in the game, and the possibility of generalising multi-agent negotiation beyond this framework is raised
Experts and Decision Making: First Steps Towards a Unifying Theory of Decision Making in Novices, Intermediates and Experts
Expertise research shows quite ambiguous results on the abilities of experts in judgment and decision making (JDM) classic models cannot account for. This problem becomes even more accentuated if different levels of expertise are considered. We argue that parallel constraint satisfaction models (PCS) might be a useful base to understand the processes underlying expert JDM and the hitherto existing, differentiated results from expertise research. It is outlined how expertise might influence model parameters and mental representations according to PCS. It is discussed how this differential impact of expertise on model parameters relates to empirical results showing quite different courses in the development of expertise; allowing, for example, to predict under which conditions intermediates might outperform experts. Methodological requirements for testing the proposed unifying theory under complex real-world conditions are discussed.Judgment and Decision Making, Expertise, Intermediate Effects, Parallel Constraint Satisfaction, Mental Representation
Collective intelligence: creating a prosperous world at peace
XXXII, 612 p. ; 24 cmLibro ElectrĂłnicoEn este documento se plantea un tema de interes general mas como lo es especificamente el tema de la evolucion de la sociedad en materia de industria y crecimiento de las actividades humanas en el aspecto de desarrollo de la creatividad enfocada a los mercadosedited by Mark Tovey ; foreword by Yochai Benkler (re-mixed by Hassan Masum) ; prefaces by Thomas Malone, Tom Atlee & Pierre Levy ; afterword by Paul Martin & Thomas Homer-Dixon.The era of collective intelligence has begun in earnest. While others have written about the wisdom of crowds, an army of Davids, and smart mobs, this collection of essays for the first time brings together fifty-five pioneers in the emerging discipline of collective intelligence. They provide a base of tools for connecting people, producing high-functioning teams, collaborating at multiple scales, and encouraging effective peer-production. Emerging models are explored for digital deliberative democracy, self-governance, legislative transparency, true-cost accounting, and the ethical use of open sources and methods. Collective Intelligence is the first of a series of six books, which will also include volumes on Peace Intelligence, Commercial Intelligence, Gift Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence, and Global Intelligence.Table of Contents
Dedication i
Publisherâs Preface iii
Foreword by Yochai Benkler Remix Hassan Masum xi
The Wealth of Networks: Highlights remixed
Editorâs Preface xxi
Table of Contents xxv
A What is collective intelligence and what will we do 1
about it? (Thomas W. Malone, MIT Center for
Collective Intelligence)
B Co-Intelligence, collective intelligence, and conscious 5
evolution (Tom Atlee, Co-Intelligence Institute)
C A metalanguage for computer augmented collective 15
intelligence (Prof. Pierre LĂ©vy, Canada Research
Chair in Collective Intelligence, FRSC)
I INDIVIDUALS & GROUPS I-01 Foresight I-01-01 Safety Glass (Karl Schroeder, science fiction author 23
and foresight consultant)
I-01-02 2007 State of the Future (Jerome C. Glenn & 29
Theodore J. Gordon, United Nations Millennium
Project)
I-02 Dialogue & Deliberation I-02-01 Thinking together without ego: Collective intelligence 39
as an evolutionary catalyst (Craig Hamilton and Claire
Zammit, Collective-Intelligence.US)
I-02-02 The World Café: Awakening collective intelligence 47
and committed action (Juanita Brown, David Isaacs
and the World Café Community)
I-02-03 Collective intelligence and the emergence of 55
wholeness (Peggy Holman, Nexus for Change, The
Change Handbook)
I-02-04 Knowledge creation in collective intelligence (Bruce 65
LaDuke, Fortune 500, HyperAdvance.com)
I-02-05 The Circle Organization: Structuring for collective 75
wisdom (Jim Rough, Dynamic Facilitation & The
Center for Wise Democracy)
I-03 Civic Intelligence I-03-01 Civic intelligence and the public sphere (Douglas 83
Schuler, Evergreen State College, Public Sphere
Project)
I-03-02 Civic intelligence and the security of the homeland 95
(John Kesler with Carole and David Schwinn,
IngeniusOnline)
I-03-03 Creating a Smart Nation (Robert Steele, OSS.Net) 107
I-03-04 University 2.0: Informing our collective intelligence 131
(Nancy Glock-Grueneich, HIGHEREdge.org)
I-03-05 Producing communities of communications and 145
foreknowledge (Jason âJZâ Liszkiewicz,
Reconfigure.org)
I-03-06 Global Vitality Report 2025: Learning to transform I-04 Electronic Communities & Distributed Cognition I-04-01 Attentional capital and the ecology of online social 163
conflict and think together effectively (Peter+Trudy networks (Derek Lomas, Social Movement Lab,
Johnson-Lenz, Johnson-Lenz.com ) UCSD)
I-04-02 A slice of life in my virtual community (Howard 173
Rheingold, Whole Earth Review, Author & Educator)
I-04-03 Shared imagination (Dr. Douglas C. Engelbart, 197
Bootstrap)
I-05 Privacy & Openness I-05-01 Weâre all swimming in media: End-users must be able 201
to keep secrets (Mitch Ratcliffe, BuzzLogic &
Tetriad)
I-05-02 Working openly (Lion Kimbro, Programmer and 205
Activist)
I-06 Integral Approaches & Global Contexts I-06-01 Meta-intelligence for analyses, decisions, policy, and 213
action: The Integral Process for working on complex
issues (Sara Nora Ross, Ph.D. ARINA & Integral
Review)
I-06-02 Collective intelligence: From pyramidal to global 225
(Jean-Francois Noubel, The Transitioner)
I-06-03 Cultivating collective intelligence: A core leadership 235
competence in a complex world (George PĂłr, Fellow
at Universiteit van Amsterdam)
II LARGE-SCALE COLLABORATION II-01 Altruism, Group IQ, and Adaptation II-01-01 Empowering individuals towards collective online 245
production (Keith Hopper, KeithHopper.com)
II-01-02 Whoâs smarter: chimps, baboons or bacteria? The 251
power of Group IQ (Howard Bloom, author)
II-01-03 A collectively generated model of the world (Marko 261
A. Rodriguez, Los Alamos National Laboratory)
II-02 Crowd Wisdom and Cognitive Bias II-02-01 Science of CI: Resources for change (Norman L 265
Johnson, Chief Scientist at Referentia Systems, former
LANL)
II-02-02 Collectively intelligent systems (Jennifer H. Watkins, 275
Los Alamos National Laboratory)
II-02-03 A contrarian view (Jaron Lanier, scholar-in-residence, 279
CET, UC Berkeley & Discover Magazine)
II-03 Semantic Structures & The Semantic Web II-03-01 Information Economy Meta Language (Interview with 283
Professor Pierre LĂ©vy, by George PĂłr)
II-03-02 Harnessing the collective intelligence of the World- 293
Wide Web (Nova Spivack, RadarNetworks, Web 3.0)
II-03-03 The emergence of a global brain (Francis Heylighen, 305
Free University of Brussels)
II-04 Information Networks II-04-01 Networking and mobilizing collective intelligence (G.
Parker Rossman, Future of Learning Pioneer)
II-04-02 Toward high-performance organizations: A strategic 333
role for Groupware (Douglas C. Engelbart, Bootstrap)
II-04-03 Search panacea or ploy: Can collective intelligence 375
improve findability? (Stephen E. Arnold, Arnold IT,
Inc.)
II-05 Global Games, Local Economies, & WISER II-05-01 World Brain as EarthGame (Robert Steele and many 389
others, Earth Intelligence Network)
II-05-02 The Interra Project (Jon Ramer and many others) 399
II-05-03 From corporate responsibility to Backstory 409
Management (Alex Steffen, Executive Editor,
Worldchanging.com)
II-05-04 World Index of Environmental & Social 413
Responsibility (WISER)
By the Natural Capital Institute
II-06 Peer-Production & Open Source Hardware II-06-01 The Makersâ Bill of Rights (Jalopy, Torrone, and Hill) 421
II-06-02 3D Printing and open source design (James Duncan, 423
VP of Technology at Marketingisland)
II-06-03 REBEARTHTM: 425
II-07 Free Wireless, Open Spectrum, and Peer-to-Peer II-07-01 MontrĂ©al Community Wi-Fi (Ăle Sans Fil) (Interview 433
with Michael Lenczner by Mark Tovey)
II-07-02 The power of the peer-to-peer future (Jock Gill, 441
Founder, Penfield Gill Inc.)
Growing a world 6.6 billion people
would want to live in (Marc Stamos, B-Comm, LL.B)
II-07-03 Open spectrum (David Weinberger)
II-08 Mass Collaboration & Large-Scale Argumentation II-08-01 Mass collaboration, open source, and social 455
entrepreneurship (Mark Tovey, Advanced Cognitive
Engineering Lab, Institute of Cognitive Science,
Carleton University)
II-08-02 Interview with Thomas Homer-Dixon (Hassan 467
Masum, McLaughlin-Rotman Center for Global
Health)
II-08-03 Achieving collective intelligence via large-scale
argumentation (Mark Klein, MIT Center for
Collective Intelligence)
II-08-04 Scaling up open problem solving (Hassan Masum & 485
Mark Tovey)
D Afterword: The Internet and the revitalization of 495
democracy (The Rt. Honourable Paul Martin &
Thomas Homer-Dixon)
E Epilogue by Tom Atlee 513
F Three Lists 515
1. Strategic Reading Categories
2. Synopsis of the New Progressives
3. Fifty-Two Questions that Matter
G Glossary 519
H Index 52
Methodological individualism : true and false
I apply Hayekâs distinction between âtrueâ and âfalseâ individualism to methodological individualism. Hayek traced âfalseâ individualism to Cartesian rationalism; Hayekâs rejection of Misesâ praxeology was due to its rationalist underpinnings. The first half of this paper identifies praxeologyâs foundational philosophical concepts, emphasising their Cartesian nature, and illustrates how together they constitute a case for methodological individualism: intuition and deduction; reductionism; judgement; dualism. In the second half of this paper, I draw upon philosophy and cognitive science to articulate âHayekianâ (N.B. not Hayekâs) alternatives to these Cartesian concepts. The Hayekian alternative allows a âgestalt switchâ from the individual- to the system-level perspective. I therefore suggest that methodological individualism is both true and false: true, in that economic phenomena are grounded in the actions of individuals; false, in that certain problems might be reconceived/discovered at the system-level. I finish by suggesting three avenues of research at system-level: optimisation; stigmergy; computational complexity
The challenge of negotiation in the game of Diplomacy
The game of Diplomacy has been used as a test case for complex automated negotiations for a long time, but to date very few successful negotiation algorithms have been implemented for this game. We have therefore decided to include a Diplomacy tournament within the annual Automated Negotiating Agents Competition (ANAC). In this paper we present the setup and the results of the ANAC 2017 Diplomacy Competition and the ANAC 2018 Diplomacy Challenge. We observe that none of the negotiation algorithms submitted to these two editions have been able to significantly improve the performance over a non-negotiating baseline agent. We analyze these algorithms and discuss why it is so hard to write successful negotiation algorithms for Diplomacy. Finally, we provide experimental evidence that, despite these results, coalition formation and coordination do form essential elements of the game
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