IRMA-International.org: Creator of Knowledge
Information Resources Management Association
Advancing the Concepts & Practices of Information Resources Management in Modern Organizations

Artificial Minds with Consciousness and Common sense Aspects

Artificial Minds with Consciousness and Common sense Aspects
View Sample PDF
Author(s): K.R. Shylaja (Dr. Ambedkar Institute of Technology, India), M.V. Vijayakumar (Dr. Ambedkar Institute of Technology, India), E. Vani Prasad (Lakki Reddy Bali Reddy College of Engineering, India)and Darryl N. Davis (University of Hull, UK)
Copyright: 2020
Pages: 20
Source title: Robotic Systems: Concepts, Methodologies, Tools, and Applications
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Information Resources Management Association (USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-1754-3.ch069

Purchase

View Artificial Minds with Consciousness and Common sense Aspects on the publisher's website for pricing and purchasing information.

Abstract

The research work presented in this article investigates and explains the conceptual mechanisms of consciousness and common-sense thinking of animates. These mechanisms are computationally simulated on artificial agents as strategic rules to analyze and compare the performance of agents in critical and dynamic environments. Awareness and attention to specific parameters that affect the performance of agents specify the consciousness level in agents. Common sense is a set of beliefs that are accepted to be true among a group of agents that are engaged in a common purpose, with or without self-experience. The common sense agents are a kind of conscious agents that are given with few common sense assumptions. The so-created environment has attackers with dependency on agents in the survival-food chain. These attackers create a threat mental state in agents that can affect their conscious and common sense behaviors. The agents are built with a multi-layer cognitive architecture COCOCA (Consciousness and Common sense Cognitive Architecture) with five columns and six layers of cognitive processing of each precept of an agent. The conscious agents self-learn strategies for threat management and energy level maintenance. Experimentation conducted in this research work demonstrates animate-level intelligence in their problem-solving capabilities, decision making and reasoning in critical situations.

Related Content

Rashmi Rani Samantaray, Zahira Tabassum, Abdul Azeez. © 2024. 32 pages.
Sanjana Prasad, Deepashree Rajendra Prasad. © 2024. 25 pages.
Deepak Varadam, Sahana P. Shankar, Aryan Bharadwaj, Tanvi Saxena, Sarthak Agrawal, Shraddha Dayananda. © 2024. 24 pages.
Tarun Kumar Vashishth, Vikas Sharma, Kewal Krishan Sharma, Bhupendra Kumar, Sachin Chaudhary, Rajneesh Panwar. © 2024. 29 pages.
Mrutyunjaya S. Hiremath, Rajashekhar C. Biradar. © 2024. 30 pages.
C. L. Chayalakshmi, Mahabaleshwar S. Kakkasageri, Rajani S. Pujar, Nayana Hegde. © 2024. 30 pages.
Amit Kumar Tyagi. © 2024. 29 pages.
Body Bottom