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Which Features Matter How Much When?
Author(s) -
Lee Scheffler
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
procedia computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.334
H-Index - 76
ISSN - 1877-0509
DOI - 10.1016/j.procs.2016.07.409
Subject(s) - computer science , feature (linguistics) , context (archaeology) , novelty , pattern recognition (psychology) , executable , artificial intelligence , relevance (law) , simple (philosophy) , feature learning , matching (statistics) , machine learning , paleontology , philosophy , linguistics , theology , epistemology , political science , law , biology , operating system , statistics , mathematics
How do brains learn which features matter how much, when and for what purposes? A specific feature may matter more or less for recognitions of different learned patterns, and in different contexts and attentional foci. Simple executable “neural circuits” built from biologically-inspired reusable memory pattern components in the NeurOS™ and NeuroBlocks™ technology11patents pending; see www.cognitivity.technology model and implement a range of learning and dynamic contextual/situational/attentional feature relevance. A pattern is a collection of weighted features, roughly analogous to a neuron or neuron assembly. New patterns are created for sufficiently novel feature combinations. Individual feature weights in best-matching existing patterns grow or diminish with repetition, yielding patterns that adjust to repeated experience. Arbitrarily complex classification meshes typical of human knowledge are easily assembled by varying a simple novelty parameter. Cascading pattern recognitions build up layers of concrete to abstract feature vocabularies. Names or labels are modeled as synonyms for experience patterns. Context can be modeled as yet another feature, derived from recent activity, to discriminate among otherwise similar patterns. Attention can be modeled as broad dynamic parameters modulating feature signal strengths

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