Symbolic Reasoning Task
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A Symbolic Reasoning Task is a reasoning task that requires the use of semantic symbols.
References
2013
- (Williams, 2013) ⇒ Brian C. Williams. (2013). “A Symbolic Approach to Qualitative Algebraic Reasoning." Readings in qualitative reasoning about physical systems
2010
- (Stewart et al., 2010) ⇒ Terrence C. Stewart, Xuan Choo, and Chris Eliasmith. (2010). “Symbolic Reasoning in Spiking Neurons: A Model of the Cortex / basal Ganglia / thalamus Loop.” In: Proceedings of the 32nd annual conference of the cognitive science society, pp. 1100-1105 . Cognitive Science Society Austin, TX,
2011
- http://users.cs.cf.ac.uk/Dave.Marshall/AI2/node85.html
- QUOTE: The (Symbolic) methods basically represent uncertainty belief as being {True, False, or Neither True nor False}. Some methods also had problems with Incomplete Knowledge, Contradictions in the knowledge.
Statistical methods provide a method for representing beliefs that are not certain (or uncertain) but for which there may be some supporting (or contradictory) evidence.
- QUOTE: The (Symbolic) methods basically represent uncertainty belief as being {True, False, or Neither True nor False}. Some methods also had problems with Incomplete Knowledge, Contradictions in the knowledge.
2009
- (Tattersall, 2009) ⇒ Ian Tattersall. (2009). “Language and the Origin of Symbolic Thought." Cognitive archaeology and human evolution