200 likes | 369 Views
Renaissance Engine as a Cognitive Artifact. Christopher YUKNA Ecole des Mines de Saint-Etienne (France) yukna@emse.fr. Fabrice MUHLENBACH EURISE University of Saint-Etienne (France) fabrice.muhlenbach@univ-st-etienne.fr. C. Yukna & F. Muhlenbach, Saint-Etienne, France. Outline.
E N D
Renaissance Engineas a Cognitive Artifact Christopher YUKNA Ecole des Mines de Saint-Etienne (France) yukna@emse.fr Fabrice MUHLENBACH EURISE University of Saint-Etienne (France) fabrice.muhlenbach@univ-st-etienne.fr
C. Yukna & F. Muhlenbach, Saint-Etienne, France Outline • Historical Renaissance • The CyberRenaissance • Building the Renaissance Engine • Conclusion / Future Work
C. Yukna & F. Muhlenbach, Saint-Etienne, France Historical Renaissance • Identity Time: Born the late 14th Century Place: from Italy to the Northern Europe 15th Century: the Gutenberg press
C. Yukna & F. Muhlenbach, Saint-Etienne, France Renaissance Men Copernicus Da Vinci
1423 1082 1489 1340 C. Yukna & F. Muhlenbach, Saint-Etienne, France For the paintings:
as it applies to Science C. Yukna & F. Muhlenbach, Saint-Etienne, France The CyberRenaissance Definition: Man + Computer + Internet + Software = CyberRenaissance • Today: • Gutenberg Press = Internet • Papal Library = Search Engines • Differences between the Historical Renassanceand the CyberRenaissance: • Internet is not just a library • Computer is not a book
C. Yukna & F. Muhlenbach, Saint-Etienne, France Building the Renaissance Engine Identifying the similarities between divergent fields: eg, charged particles, protons, hydrogen ions are all thesame things but referred differently in separate domains • Identifying the pattern of errors: • abductive reasoning • Occam’s Guillotine • Spotting the void: • finding emptyness implies pioneering • search engines never help us to find the abyss Prototype/Mockup: CyberNautilus
particularconclusion (special fact) deductivereasoning propositions / premise generalconclusion(laws) inductivereasoning observations of recurringphenomenal patterns most likelyhypothesis andexplanations abductivereasoning set of facts C. Yukna & F. Muhlenbach, Saint-Etienne, France The Reasoning Processes • Deduction (Aristotle) expert system: from rules to new facts • Induction machine learning: from examples to rules • Abduction (Peirce) in artificial intelligence? belief revision / automated planning
Search Engine Optimized C. Yukna & F. Muhlenbach, Saint-Etienne, France
data mining web intelligence machinelearning informationretrieval artificial intelligenceto spot the void multi-agentsystem Error DNA C. Yukna & F. Muhlenbach, Saint-Etienne, France Conclusion / Future Work What needs to be done to create the Renaissance Engine? RenaissanceEngine computer-assisted recognition of mistake elements