DocumentCode :
1626028
Title :
Inferential reasoning through soliton properties of quantum neurodynamics
Author :
Dawes, Robert L.
Author_Institution :
Martingale Res. Corp., Allen, TX, USA
fYear :
1992
Firstpage :
1314
Abstract :
The authors summarize the theory of quantum neurodynamics (QND), and explain how it serves as a plausible quantitative model of cognitive phenomena. They illustrate the model with an explanation for the anomaly of visual perception known as the phi phenomenon, and with an illustration of multiple personality formation in which quantum tunneling provides the mechanism for abrupt transition from one personality to another. Finally, they describe how the nonlinear interaction of solitary wave packets in the wave function provides an explicit, quantifiable, and computable model for the inference of new knowledge about the observed universe. In particular, they show that, just as a linear filter cannot create frequencies that were not present in the input, the inference of knowledge that is not present in the history of observations of the environment is possible only through a stochastic filtering algorithm, such as the QND, that is nonlinear in the probability density
Keywords :
cognitive systems; inference mechanisms; neurophysiology; physiological models; quantum theory; 0 phenomenon; abrupt personality transition; cognitive phenomena; inferential reasoning; multiple personality formation; nonlinear interaction; phi phenomenon; quantum neurodynamics; quantum tunneling; solitary wave packets; soliton properties; stochastic filtering algorithm; visual perception; wave function; Frequency; History; Neurodynamics; Nonlinear filters; Quantum mechanics; Solitons; Stochastic processes; Tunneling; Visual perception; Wave functions;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, 1992., IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-0720-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICSMC.1992.271604
Filename :
271604
Link To Document :
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