Title :
Simulations of Conposit, a supra-connectionist architecture for commonsense reasoning
Author :
Barnden, John A.
Author_Institution :
Comput. Res. Lab., New Mexico State Univ., Las Cruces, NM, USA
Abstract :
A computation architecture called `Conposit´ is outlined. Composit manipulates very-short-term complex symbolic data structures of types that are useful in high-level cognitive tasks such as commonsense reasoning, planning, and natural language understanding. Conposit´s data structures are, essentially, temporary configurations of symbolic occurrences in a two-dimensional array of registers. Each register is implementable as a neural subnetwork whose activation pattern realizes the symbol occurrence. The data structures are manipulated by condition-action rules that are realizable as further neural subnetworks attached to the array. In simulations, Conposit performs symbolic processing of types previously found difficult for connectionist/neural networks. A version of Conposit, simulated on the massively parallel processor, embodying core aspects of P. Johnson-Laird´s mental model theory (1983) of human syllogistic reasoning is concentrated on. This version illustrates Conposit´s power and flexibility, which arises from two unusual data-structure encoding techniques: relative-position encoding and pattern-similarity association
Keywords :
data structures; knowledge representation; neural nets; parallel processing; symbol manipulation; virtual machines; activation pattern; commonsense reasoning; condition-action rules; data-structure encoding; high-level cognitive tasks; human syllogistic reasoning; massively parallel processor; mental model theory; natural language understanding; neural subnetwork; pattern-similarity association; planning; relative-position encoding; supra-connectionist architecture; symbolic occurrences; symbolic processing; very-short-term complex symbolic data structures; Cognitive science; Computational modeling; Computer architecture; Data structures; Encoding; Humans; Information processing; Laboratories; Natural languages; Neural networks;
Conference_Titel :
Frontiers of Massively Parallel Computation, 1988. Proceedings., 2nd Symposium on the Frontiers of
Conference_Location :
Fairfax, VA
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-5892-4
DOI :
10.1109/FMPC.1988.47435