K-line (artificial intelligence) - significado y definición. Qué es K-line (artificial intelligence)
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Qué (quién) es K-line (artificial intelligence) - definición

MENTAL AGENT IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
K-line (Artificial Intelligence); Knowledge-line

K-line (artificial intelligence)         
A K-line, or Knowledge-line, is a mental agent which represents an association of a group of other mental agents found active when a subject solves a certain problem or formulates a new idea. These were first described in Marvin Minsky's essay K-lines: A Theory of Memory, published in 1980 in the journal Cognitive Science:
History of artificial intelligence         
  • [[Al-Jazari]]'s programmable automata (1206 CE)
  • The IBM 702: a computer used by the first generation of AI researchers.
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  • [[Gottfried Leibniz]], who speculated that human reason could be reduced to mechanical calculation
  • Depiction of a homunculus from Goethe's Faust
  • A Hopfield net with four nodes
  • An example of a [[semantic network]]
OVERVIEW OF THE HISTORY OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Artificial intelligence (history); History of AI; History of machine intelligence
The history of artificial intelligence (AI) began in antiquity, with myths, stories and rumors of artificial beings endowed with intelligence or consciousness by master craftsmen. The seeds of modern AI were planted by philosophers who attempted to describe the process of human thinking as the mechanical manipulation of symbols.
ECCAI         
EUROPEAN LEARNED SOCIETY FOR ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
ECCAI; European coordinating committee for artificial intelligence; European Coordinating Committee for Artificial Intelligence; EurAI
European Coordinating Committee for Artificial Intelligence (Reference: org., AI, Europe)

Wikipedia

K-line (artificial intelligence)

A K-line, or Knowledge-line, is a mental agent which represents an association of a group of other mental agents found active when a subject solves a certain problem or formulates a new idea. These were first described in Marvin Minsky's essay K-lines: A Theory of Memory, published in 1980 in the journal Cognitive Science:

When you "get an idea," or "solve a problem" ... you create what we shall call a K-line. ... When that K-line is later "activated", it reactivates ... mental agencies, creating a partial mental state "resembling the original."

"Whenever you 'get a good idea', solve a problem, or have a memorable experience, you activate a K-line to 'represent' it. A K-line is a wirelike structure that attaches itself to whichever mental agents are active when you solve a problem or have a good idea.

When you activate that K-line later, the agents attached to it are aroused, putting you into a 'mental state' much like the one you were in when you solved that problem or got that idea. This should make it relatively easy for you to solve new, similar problems!" (1998, p. 82.)