Artificial Psychology: The Psychology of AI
James A. Crowder, Shelli Friess
Having artificially intelligent machines that think, learn,
reason, experience, and can function autonomously, without
supervision, is one of the most intriguing goals in all of
Computer Science. As the types of problems we would like
machines to solve get more complex, it is becoming a
necessary goal as well. One of the many problems associated
with this goal is that what learning and reasoning are have so
many possible meanings that the solution can easily get lost in
the sea of opinions and options. The goal of this paper is to
establish some foundational principles, theory, and concepts
that we feel are the backbone of real, autonomous Artificial
Intelligence. With this fully autonomous, learning, reasoning,
artificially intelligent system (an artificial brain), comes the
need to possess constructs in its hardware and software that
mimic processes and subsystems that exist within the human
brain, including intuitive and emotional memory concepts.
Presented here is a discussion of the psychological constructs
of artificial intelligence and how they might play out in an
artificial mind. Full Text
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