Proceedings:
Control Mechanisms for Spatial Knowledge Processing in Cognitive / Intelligent Systems
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Papers from the 2007 AAAI Spring Symposium
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Abstract:
Most models of cognitive mapping would suggest that the process begins by constructing some form of a structural representation of the environment visited. From the latter representation, one develops a conceptual view of the environment. The flow of information in the process is almost unidirectional, from perception to conception. In this paper, I argue that this process is inappropriate for a human cognitive mapping process. The latter process should begin with some symbolic notions of places and never needed to construct explicitly a structural representation of the environment visited. Humans' ability to visualise the structural details in a familiar environment comes from the increasingly detailed grounding of its symbols to the real world as a result of familiarisation and attention to details.
Spring
Papers from the 2007 AAAI Spring Symposium