A formal theory of commonsense psychology: how people think people think
Commonsense psychology refers to the implicit theories that we all use to make sense of people's behavior in terms of their beliefs, goals, plans, and emotions. These are also the theories we employ when we anthropomorphize complex machines and computers as if they had humanlike mental lives. I...
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Format: | E-Book |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge
Cambridge University Press
2017
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Links: | https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316584705 |
Zusammenfassung: | Commonsense psychology refers to the implicit theories that we all use to make sense of people's behavior in terms of their beliefs, goals, plans, and emotions. These are also the theories we employ when we anthropomorphize complex machines and computers as if they had humanlike mental lives. In order to successfully cooperate and communicate with people, these theories will need to be represented explicitly in future artificial intelligence systems. This book provides a large-scale logical formalization of commonsense psychology in support of humanlike artificial intelligence. It uses formal logic to encode the deep lexical semantics of the full breadth of psychological words and phrases, providing fourteen hundred axioms of first-order logic organized into twenty-nine commonsense psychology theories and sixteen background theories. This in-depth exploration of human commonsense reasoning for artificial intelligence researchers, linguists, and cognitive and social psychologists will serve as a foundation for the development of humanlike artificial intelligence. |
Umfang: | 1 Online-Ressource (xii, 572 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9781316584705 |
Internformat
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100 | 1 | |a Gordon, Andrew S. | |
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264 | 1 | |a Cambridge |b Cambridge University Press |c 2017 | |
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spelling | Gordon, Andrew S. A formal theory of commonsense psychology how people think people think Andrew S. Gordon, University of Southern California, Jerry R. Hobbs, University of Southern California Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2017 1 Online-Ressource (xii, 572 Seiten) txt c cr Commonsense psychology refers to the implicit theories that we all use to make sense of people's behavior in terms of their beliefs, goals, plans, and emotions. These are also the theories we employ when we anthropomorphize complex machines and computers as if they had humanlike mental lives. In order to successfully cooperate and communicate with people, these theories will need to be represented explicitly in future artificial intelligence systems. This book provides a large-scale logical formalization of commonsense psychology in support of humanlike artificial intelligence. It uses formal logic to encode the deep lexical semantics of the full breadth of psychological words and phrases, providing fourteen hundred axioms of first-order logic organized into twenty-nine commonsense psychology theories and sixteen background theories. This in-depth exploration of human commonsense reasoning for artificial intelligence researchers, linguists, and cognitive and social psychologists will serve as a foundation for the development of humanlike artificial intelligence. Hobbs, Jerry R. Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe 9781107151000 |
spellingShingle | Gordon, Andrew S. A formal theory of commonsense psychology how people think people think |
title | A formal theory of commonsense psychology how people think people think |
title_auth | A formal theory of commonsense psychology how people think people think |
title_exact_search | A formal theory of commonsense psychology how people think people think |
title_full | A formal theory of commonsense psychology how people think people think Andrew S. Gordon, University of Southern California, Jerry R. Hobbs, University of Southern California |
title_fullStr | A formal theory of commonsense psychology how people think people think Andrew S. Gordon, University of Southern California, Jerry R. Hobbs, University of Southern California |
title_full_unstemmed | A formal theory of commonsense psychology how people think people think Andrew S. Gordon, University of Southern California, Jerry R. Hobbs, University of Southern California |
title_short | A formal theory of commonsense psychology |
title_sort | formal theory of commonsense psychology how people think people think |
title_sub | how people think people think |
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