Saturday, October 12, 2019
Representational Systems :: Communication Engineering Papers
                             Representational Systems         This paper seeks to define a representational system in       such a manner as to be capable of implementation in a connectionist,       or neural, network.  A representational system is defined and       demonstrated to possess the ability to produce outputs which achieve       global minima.  The paper concludes by showing that, while a       feed-forward neural network is incapable of representation,       representation may be implemented in a recurrent, or internal       feedback, connectionist network.         Introduction              Representational systems are commonly in the Artificial       Intelligence (AI) domain of symbolic logic.  Expert Systems are       programmed into computer systems by recording the step-by-step       logical methodology of experts to minimize the costs or maximize the       utility of their decisions.  Logical statements, or beliefs, be they       fuzzy or hard, are established as "rules".  Another branch of AI,       Connectionism, attempts to build systems, often in artificial neural       networks (ANNs), that implement the methodologies of the illogical,       inexplicable, or intuitive capabilities of distributed systems such       as pattern recognition systems.  Here, it is not some logical mapping       of input to output, but rather a holistic host of inputs which       indicate micro-features which may or may not synergistically produce       a desired output.              While connectionist systems are recognized as being capable of       distributed, non-representational processing, they may also possess       the capability to additionally perform the rule-based logic of       representational systems.  As will be shown, not all connectionist       networks possess the appropriate architecture for this task.  Thus, a       neural network, depending upon its architecture, may possess the    					    
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