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Anticipatory Behavior in Adaptive Learning Systems: From Brains to Individual and Social Behavior

(2007), LNAI 4520. Berlin Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag.

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Topics associated with the current item:

AREA:Forward models

AREA:Individual behaviour

AREA:Sensori-motor representations

AREA:Social behaviour

AREA:Symbolic representations

KINDOF:Integration

KINDOF:Review

PARTNER:ISTC-CNR

PARTNER:UW-COGSCI

THEME:Action Control

THEME:Active vision

THEME:Analogy-based

THEME:Attention

THEME:Cautiousness

THEME:Cognitive processes

THEME:Concept formation

THEME:Context

THEME:Curiosity

THEME:Emotions

THEME:Goals

THEME:Ideomotor principle

THEME:Monitoring

THEME:Priming

THEME:Sensori-motor

THEME:Surprise

WPS:4

WPS:6

WPS:7

Authors and Collaborators:

Martin V. Butz Olivier Sigaud Giovanni Pezzulo Gianluca Baldassarre
Created by butz
Contributors : Martin V. Butz, Olivier Sigaud, Giovanni Pezzulo, Gianluca Baldassarre
Last modified 2007-10-30 02:33 PM
 

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Anticipatory Cognitive Science is a research field that ensembles artificial intelligence, biology, psychology, neurology, engineering and philosophy in order to build anticipatory cognitive systems that are able to face human tasks with the same anticipatory capabilities and performance. In deep: Cognitive science is the interdisciplinary study of mind and intelligence, embracing philosophy, psychology, artificial intelligence, neuroscience, linguistics, and anthropology. Its intellectual origins are in the mid-1950s when researchers in several fields began to develop theories of mind based on complex representations and computational procedures. Its organizational origins are in the mid-1970s when the Cognitive Science Society was formed and the journal Cognitive Science began. Since then, more than sixty universities in North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia have established cognitive science programs, and many others have instituted courses in cognitive science.