An Integrated Theory of the Mind.
Carnegie Mellon University · Rice University
Abstract
Adaptive control of thought-rational (ACT-R; J. R. Anderson & C. Lebiere, 1998) has evolved into a theory that consists of multiple modules but also explains how these modules are integrated to produce coherent cognition. The perceptual-motor modules, the goal module, and the declarative memory module are presented as examples of specialized systems in ACT-R. These modules are associated with distinct cortical regions. These modules place chunks in buffers where they can be detected by a production system that responds to patterns of information in the buffers. At any point in time, a single production rule is selected to respond to the current pattern. Subsymbolic processes serve to guide the selection of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 49.86
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 165
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Computer science
- Function (biology)
- Cognition
- Artificial intelligence
- Point (geometry)
- Simple (philosophy)
- Production (economics)
- Selection (genetic algorithm)