crum - meaning and definition. What is crum
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is crum - definition

HYPOTHESIS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE
CRUM; Computational-Representational Understanding of Mind

crum         
Something that you dislike, usually an article of clothing of food.
That's so cheap looking - it's crum. I wouldn't be caught wearing it.
Crum         
Crum may refer to: The name Crum has a history dating as far back as the Anglo-Saxon tribes of Britain. It was a name for a person with an abnormal curvature of the spine.
Ethel Katherine Crum         
AMERICAN BOTANIST AND EDITOR (1886-1943)
Ethel Katherine Crum (1886-1943) was an American botanist, noted for collecting and studying California flora, as well as serving as assistant curator of the University of California Herbarium. She discovered and formally described at least 13 species and varieties of plants.

Wikipedia

Computational-representational understanding of mind

Computational representational understanding of mind (CRUM) is a hypothesis in cognitive science which proposes that thinking is performed by computations operating on representations. This hypothesis assumes that the mind has mental representations analogous to data structures and computational procedures analogous to algorithms, such that computer programs using algorithms applied to data structures can model the mind and its processes..

CRUM takes into consideration several theoretical approaches of understanding human cognition, including logic, rule, concept, analogy, image, and connectionist-based systems based on artificial neural networks. These serve as the representation aspects of CRUM theory which are then acted upon to simulate certain aspects of human cognition, such as the use of rule-based systems in neuroeconomics.

There is much disagreement on this hypothesis, but CRUM has high regard among some researchers. Philosopher Paul Thagard called it "the most theoretically and experimentally successful approach to mind ever developed".

Examples of use of crum
1. "It‘s just been maybe slower than anticipated," said Stifel Nicolaus analyst Drew Crum.
2. Crum served as sports director for much of his time with the station.
3. A spokesman for the office, James Crum, said 1,636 projects of 2,265 originally under the office had been completed.
4. Daughter Kelly Delaveris says Crum died of apparent natural causes at home at a Columbus retirement community.
5. Crum on Oct. 21, 1'28, he was known as "Jimmy" during his nearly half a century with WCMH–TV in Columbus.