Robust inference with simple cognitive models (2006)
Authors
Abstract
Developing theories of how information is processed to yield inductive inferences is a key step in understanding intelligence in humans and machines. Humans, across tasks as diverse as vision and decision making, appear to be extremely adaptive and successful in dealing with uncertainty in the world. Yet even a cursory examination of the books and journals covering machine learning reveals that this branch of AI rarely draws on the cognitive system as a source of insight. In this article I show how fast and frugal heuristics cognitive process models of inductive inference frequently outperform a wide selection of standard machine learning algorithms. This finding suggests a cognitive-inspired route toward robust inference in the context of meta-learning.
Bibliographic entry
Brighton, H. J. (2006). Robust inference with simple cognitive models. In C. Lebiere & B. Wray (Eds.), Between a rock and a hard place: Cognitive science principles meet AI-hard problems. Papers from the AAAI Spring Symposium (AAAI Tech. Rep. NO. SS-06-02) (pp. 17-22). Menlo Park, Calif.: AAAI Press.
Miscellaneous
Publication year | 2006 | |
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Document type: | In book | |
Publication status: | Published | |
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Keywords: | copyright ©2006, american association for artifici |