| C. Van Amerongen. The Way Things Work, volume 1-4. Simon and Schuster, New York, 1967. |
....be displayed differently. Although personality is not the only determiner of emotions, their intensity, and their manifestation, we will use it as the first step in the creation of consistent individuality. 4. 1 Modeling Emotion Several different emotion models have been applied to virtual beings [15, 19, 25]. The most popular model is the OCC model, named after the authors [28] In this model, emotions are generated through the agent s construal of and reaction to the consequence of events, actions of agents, and aspects of objects. Although many researchers have based their work on this model [18, ....
J. LeDoux. The Emotional Brain. Simon and Schuster, New York, 1996.
....of self reinforcing price movements, but, rather, to jump on the bandwagon, jumping off only near the top. Such a trading strategy is exemplified by view of market mechanisms presented by George Soros, who stresses the importance of investor bias s and self reinforcing trends in security analysis [14]. Central to the theme of the present analysis is the idea of positive feedback traders as discussed in [12] Positive feedback traders, are those who are more inclined to buy as prices rise and sell when prices fall. Otherwise known as trend chasing, positive feedback trading takes on many ....
George Soros. The Alchemy of Finance. Simon and Schuster, 1987.
....shows that type 1 and type 2 simplifications can be generated in polynomial time. 2 34 5.6 Discussion The techniques developed in this section have been incorporated into an implemented automated modeling system. This system has been tested on a variety of electromechanical devices drawn from [3, 27, 41], using a library of about 150 types of model fragments, including descriptions of electricity, magnetism, heat, and the kinematics and dynamics of one dimensional motion. All approximations in this library are, of course, causal approximations. The devices range in complexity from 10 to 54 ....
C. van Amerongen. The Way Things Work. Simon and Schuster, 1967.
....somehow to make its general6 ization abilities transparent. That is, the trained networks must be analysed to discover the features that have been learned, so extracting knowledge about the structure of phoneme categories. One objection to this kind of endeavor has been voiced by Crick, who writes [14]: A possible criticism of . neural networks is that since they use such a grossly unrealistic learning algorithm, they really don t reveal much about the brain. As pointed out by Crick himself, however, an answer to this criticism has been provided by Zipser [15] who treats supervised ....
F. Crick. The Astonishing Hypothesis. Simon and Schuster, London, UK, 1994.
....3. 1 Properties of a Behavior Based System Some of the important issues raised by Brooks are: ffl Emergent Intelligence : Resulting overall behavior of a system that is not explicitly represented in a computer system or a direct result of first principles is referred to as emergent behavior [9, 24]. Behavior based systems exploit emergent behavior by allowing complex behavior to emerge from simple behaviors interacting with the world and each other [18] ffl No abstract representation of goals : A behavior based system does not represent goals explicitly. Observed goal directed behavior ....
....unlike traditional centralised systems which may fail to handle unanticipated circumstances. ffl Intelligence as an observed property : Some researchers claim that intelligence is not an inherent property of a system but an observed property of the system s interaction with a complex environment [24, 6]. Behavior based systems use this idea by allowing each behavior to interact directly with the complexity of the world. This contrasts with the traditional approach of providing a central reasoning system with an abstracted model. ffl Inspiration from Nature : Many of the ideas behind behavior ....
M. Minksy. The Society of Mind. Simon and Schuster, 1988.
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C. Van Amerongen. The Way Things Work, volume 1-4. Simon and Schuster, New York, 1967.
....within which one may try to derive isotopic spin and strangeness conservation and broken eightfold symmetry from self consistency alone. Of course, with only strong interactions the orientation of the asymmetry in the unitary space cannot be specified; one hopes that lAccording to one source [24], after the experimental presentation of E (1530) and E 0 discoveries, both Gell Mann and Ne eman raised hand asking for word, but as Gell Mann was sitting in the front row he got the word. According to [25] only Ne eman raised but the chairman called, Tell Mann , probably because the latter was ....
M. Riordan: The Hunting of the Quark, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1987
....operators has an analytic continuation. It has been shown in an earlier paper [4] that the Ackermann functions can be written as m# k n. To have a rough estimate of the size of these numbers it should be instructive to compare 2# 4 4 with 1362 256 , the number of electrons in the universe [5] as given by Eddington. ....
A. S. Eddington, The Constants of Nature, The World of Mathematics, Vol. 2, (Edited by J. R. Newman), Simon and Schuster, New York, NY, (1956). 3
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The origins of the Internet," Simon and Schuster, 1996.
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Brockman, J. The Third Culture. Simon and Schuster, New York, 1995.
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Turkle, S. The Second Self. Simon and Schuster, NY 1984.
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Turlde, S. The Second Self. Simon and Schuster, NY 1984.
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J.R. Newmann, The World of Mathematics, vol. 1, Simon and Schuster,
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"The Cosmic Code", Heinz Pagels, Simon and Schuster, 1982.
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"The Society of Mind", Marvin Minsky, Simon and Schuster, New York, NY, 1986.
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