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Artificial intuition : ウィキペディア英語版 | Artificial intuition
Artificial intuition is the capacity of an artificial object or software to function with intuition, or a machine-based system that has some capacity to function analogous to the human intuition. ==Comparison== Conventional human intuition is a function of the human mind, defined particularly by the psychologist and psychiatrist Carl Jung. Psychologist Jean Piaget showed that intuitive functioning within the normally developing human child at the ''Intuitive Thought Substage'' of the preoperational stage occurred at from four to seven years of age.〔Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behaviour, Richard Gross ISBN 978-1-4441-0831-6 see: Jean Piaget〕〔Santrock, John W. (2004). Life-Span Development (9th Ed.). Boston, MA: McGraw-Hill College - Chapter 8 ''from'' Piaget's theory of cognitive development〕 In Carl Jung's concept of synchronicity, the concept of "intuitive intelligence" is described as something like a capacity that transcends ordinary-level functioning to a point where information is understood with a greater depth than is available in more simple rationally-thinking entities.〔(worldcat ) retrieved 11:03(GMT) 26.10.201〕〔( ''Farlex'' ) retrieved 11:08(GMT) 26.10.2011〕〔Jung, C.G. (() 1971). Psychological Types, Collected Works, Volume 6, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-01813-8.〕〔Jung, Carl (2006). The Undiscovered Self: The Problem of the Individual in Modern Society. (''introduction'') ISBN 0-451-21860-4. see also : ''the Unconscious mind''〕〔The Essential Jung:Selected Writings (with an introduction by Anthony Storr) ISBN 0-00-653065-6〕 Artificial intuition is theoretically (or otherwise) a sophisticated function of an artifice that is able to interpret data with depth and locate hidden factors functioning in Gestalt psychology,〔(Herbert Simon. Artificial intelligence as a framework for understanding intuition by Roger Frantz ) retrieved 11:03(UTC) 27.10.2011 see also: Herbert A. Simon〕〔''Gestalt psychology'':Christian von Ehrenfels, Kurt Koffka & Wolfgang Köhler〕 and that intuition in the artificial mind would, in the context described here, be a bottom-up process upon a macroscopic scale identifying something like the archetypal.〔ISBN 0-691-01813-8〕( see τύπος 〔(Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon ) retrieved 11:21(UTC) 27.10.2011〕). To create artificial intuition supposes the possibility of the re-creation of a higher functioning of the human mind, with capabilities such as what might be found in semantic memory and learning.〔(Fuzzy Information and Engineering Volume 1 Chapter titled ''Crime pattern study and fuzzy Information Analysis'' (Springer, 2008) ) By Bing-Yuan Cao 19:17(GMT) 25.10.2011 ''see also'':Fuzzy logic〕〔(Monica Anderson (research company website) ) retrieved 12:23(GMT) 26.10.2011〕〔(website by Gunther Sonnenfeld ) retrieved 19:36(GMT) 25.10.2011〕 The transferral of the functioning of a biological system to synthetic functioning is based upon modeling of functioning from knowledge of cognition and the brain,〔(sulcus.berkeley.edu ) retrieved 20:57(GMT) 25.10.2011〕〔(ITP ) retrieved 20:52(GMT) 25.10.2011〕 for instance as applications of models of artificial neural networks from the research done within the discipline of Computational neuroscience.〔Schwartz, Eric (1990). Computational neuroscience. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-19291-8.〕
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