DocumentCode
458799
Title
The Particle Swarm: Individual and Collective Intelligence
Author
Kennedy, James
Author_Institution
Bureau of Labor Statistics, USA
Volume
1
fYear
2006
fDate
Oct. 2006
Abstract
Western psychology has traditionally focused on processes considered to be internal or private to the individual, with the social world generally regarded as an aspect of "the environment." Recent cross-cultural psychological research reveals fundamental differences in the way cognition operates in people from different cultures, demonstrating that the social environment not only affects thought, but helps create it. These discoveries are mirrored in the field of computational intelligence; researchers identifying methods for eliciting intelligent behavior from machines are looking more and more into models that consider the individual inextricably integrated with the social milieu. These new models are radically different from traditional AI, which treats cognition as a set of processes taking place inside an isolated brain. In this lecture I will discuss these dichotomies in terms of the particle swarm algorithm, which is a model of collectively integrated intelligences; developments in the particle swarm paradigm will be framed in terms of the interplay of culture and cognition.
Keywords
Artificial intelligence; Brain modeling; Cognition; Competitive intelligence; Computational intelligence; Machine intelligence; Particle swarm optimization; Psychology; Statistics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Intelligent Systems Design and Applications, 2006. ISDA '06. Sixth International Conference on
Conference_Location
Jian, China
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2528-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISDA.2006.269
Filename
4021391
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