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Proceedings of the KI 2009 Workshop on Complex Cognition
Abstract: The KI ´09 workshop on Complex Cognition was a joint venture of the Cognition group of the Special Interest Group Artificial Intelligence of the German Computer Science Society (Gesellschaft für Informatik) and the German Cognitive Science Association. Dealing with complexity has become one of the great challenges for modern information societies. To reason and decide, plan and act in complex domains is no longer limited to highly specialized professionals in restricted areas such as medical diagnosis, controlling technical processes, or serious game playing. Complexity has reached everyday life and affects people in such mundane activities as buying a train ticket, investing money, or connecting a home desktop to the internet. Research in cognitive AI can contribute to supporting people navigating through the jungle of everyday reasoning, decision making, planning and acting by providing intelligent support technology. Lessons learned from expert systems research of the nineteen-eighties show that the aim should not be to provide for fully automated systems which can solve specialized tasks autonomously but instead to develop interactive assistant systems where user and system work together by taking advantage of the respective strengths of human and machine. To accomplish a smooth collaboration between humans and intelligent systems, basic research in cognition is a necessary precondition. Insights into cognitive structures and processes underlying successful human reasoning and planning can provide suggestions for algorithm design. Even more important, insights into restrictions and typical errors and misconceptions of the cognitive systems provide information about those parts of a complex task from which the human should be relieved. For successful human-computer interaction in complex domains it has, furthermore, to be decided which information should be presented when, in what way, to the user. We strongly believe that symbolic approaches of AI and psychological research of higher cognition are at the core of success for the endeavor to create intelligent assistant system for complex domains. While insight into the neurological processes of the brain and into the realization of basic processes of perception, attention and senso-motoric coordination are important for the basic understanding of the principles of human intelligence, these processes have a much too fine granularity for the design and realization of interactive systems which must communicate with the user on knowledge level. If human system users are not to be incapacitated by a system, system decisions must be transparent for the user and the system must be able to provide explanations for the reasons of its proposals and recommendations. Therefore, even when some of the underlying algorithms are based on statistical or neuronal approaches, the top-level of such systems must be symbolical and rule-based. The papers presented at this workshop on complex cognition give an inspiring and promising overview of current work in the field which can provide first building stones for our endeavor to create knowledge level intelligent assistant systems for complex domains. The topics cover modelling basic cognitive processes, interfacing subsymbolic and symbolic representations, dealing with continuous time, Bayesian identification of problem solving strategies, linguistically inspired methods for assessing complex cognitive processes and complex domains such as recognition of sketches, predicting changes in stocks, spatial information processing, and coping with critical situations.
Keyword: 004; Artificial Intelligence; Cognition; Cognitive Modelling; Cognitive Psychology; Kognition; Kognitionspsychologie; Kognitive Modellierung; Künstliche Intelligenz
URL: https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/178
https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bvb:473-opus-2129
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2
Space to reason : a spatial theory of human thought
Knauff, Markus. - Cambridge, Mass. [u.a.] : The MIT Press, 2013
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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3
Space to reason : a spatial theory of human thought electronic resource
Knauff, Markus. - Cambridge, Massachusetts : MIT Press, 2013, [2013]©2013
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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4
Spatial belief revision
In: Journal of cognitive psychology. - Abingdon : Routlegde, Taylor & Francis Group 25 (2013) 2, 147-156
OLC Linguistik
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5
Modelling graded semantic effects in lexical decision
Chang, Ya-Ning; Lambon Ralph, Matthew; Furber, Steve. - : Cognitive Science Society, 2013
BASE
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6
A distributional learning account of the acquisition of the locative alternation:corpus analysis and modeling
Twomey, Katherine; Chang, Franklin; Ambridge, Ben. - : Cognitive Science Society, 2013
BASE
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7
Modelling the effects of formal literacy training on language mediated visual attention
Smith, Alastair C.; Monaghan, Padraic; Huettig, Falk. - : Cognitive Science Society, 2013
BASE
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8
Emotional priming of sentence comprehension: effects of a speaker’s static emotional expression and listener age
Carminati, Maria Nella; Knoeferle, Pia; Knauff, Markus. - : Cognitive Science Society, 2013
BASE
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9
Cross-situational statistical learning of phonologically overlapping words
Escudero, Paola (R16636); Mulak, Karen E. (S24744); Vlach, Haley. - : U.S.A., Cognitive Science Society, 2013
BASE
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10
The effects of source trustworthiness and inference type on human belief revision
In: Thinking & reasoning. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 18 (2012) 4, 417-440
OLC Linguistik
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11
A neuro-cognitive theory of deductive relational reasoning with mental models and visual images
In: Spatial cognition and computation. - Philadelphia, Pa. : Taylor & Francis 9 (2009) 2, 109-137
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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12
Working Memory in Wayfinding—A Dual Task Experiment in a Virtual City
In: Cognitive science. - Hoboken, NJ : Wiley-Blackwell 32 (2008) 4, 755-770
OLC Linguistik
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13
Working memory in wayfinding - a dual task experiment in a virtual city
In: Cognitive science. - Hoboken, NJ : Wiley-Blackwell 32 (2008) 4, 755-770
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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14
How our brains reason logically
In: Topoi. - Dordrecht [u.a.] : Springer Science + Business Media B.V. 26 (2007) 1, 19-36
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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15
Preferred mental models in reasoning about spatial relations
In: Memory & cognition. - Heidelberg [u.a.] : Springer 35 (2007) 8, 2075-2087
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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16
Preferred mental models in reasoning about spatial relations
In: Memory & cognition. - Heidelberg [u.a.] : Springer 35 (2007) 8, 2075-2087
OLC Linguistik
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17
fMRI evidence for a three-stage model of deductive reasoning
In: Journal of cognitive neuroscience. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press Journals 18 (2006) 3, 320-334
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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18
Spatial and visual components in mental reasoning about space
Berthoz, Alain; Hagen, Cornelius; Strube, Gerhard. - Dordrecht [u.a.] : Kluwer, 2005
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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19
The psychological validity of qualitative spatial reasoning in one dimension
In: Spatial cognition and computation. - Philadelphia, Pa. : Taylor & Francis 4 (2004) 2, 167-188
BLLDB
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20
Commentary on "Zenon W. Pylyshyn (2002). Mental imagery? In search of a theory. BBS 25(2): 157-182" (incl. author's response)
Knauff, Markus (Mitarb.); Schlieder, Christoph (Mitarb.); Pylyshyn, Zenon W. (Mitarb.)
In: Behavioral and brain sciences. - New York, NY [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 27 (2004) 4, 589-591
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