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- Xref: sparky talk.philosophy.misc:3410 comp.ai.philosophy:7359
- Path: sparky!uunet!srvr1.engin.umich.edu!nic.umass.edu!neural!lee
- From: lee@neural.hampshire.edu (Lee Spector)
- Newsgroups: talk.philosophy.misc,comp.ai.philosophy
- Subject: Re: supervenience refs please
- Date: 22 Jan 1993 15:24:49 GMT
- Organization: Hampshire College, Amherst, MA
- Lines: 55
- Message-ID: <1jp3k1INNsgo@nic.umass.edu>
- References: <tim.727605727@giaeb>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: neural.hampshire.edu
-
- In article <tim.727605727@giaeb> tim@giaeb.cc.monash.edu.au (Tim Roberts) writes:
- >Can anyone supply me with any references to the subject of supervenience,
- >especially in relation to consciousness ?
-
- My recent dissertation, "Supervenience in Dynamic-World Planning",
- contains an extended discussion of supervenience and its application
- to AI systems. It also contains a bibliography with many pointers
- into the supervenience literature. It is available as a tech report
- or through University Microfilms International. I have included the
- abstract below.
-
- Hope this helps,
- -Lee
-
- Lee Spector
- Assistant Professor of Computer Science
- School of Communications and Cognitive Science
- Hampshire College
- Amherst, Massachusetts 01002-5001
- e-mail: lspector@hamp.hampshire.edu
-
- ---
-
- Abstract
-
- This report investigates the utility of abstraction for agents living
- in complex, dynamic environments. The generation of intelligent behavior
- in such environments requires the integration of deliberative and
- reactive processes. Modularity and hierarchy have proven to be valuable
- organizational principles in this context, and the notion of "levels
- of abstraction" has played a particularly important role. This report
- presents a form of abstraction called \underline{supervenience},
- of which other common forms of abstraction are special cases. Supervenience
- is based on epistemological "distance from the world," and is particularly
- useful for integrating deliberative processes with actions in a changing
- environment. Supervenience is discussed in relation to the literature
- of AI planning systems, the literature of cognitive psychology, and
- the philosophical literature in which the term originated. Supervenience
- is described in the context of nonmonotonic reasoning systems, and
- is compared to related formal constructs. A program based on the
- concept of supervenience is described, and its performance in a dynamic-world
- planning domain is demonstrated. This report is a reformatted version
- of the author's doctoral dissertation.
-
- Spector, Lee. Supervenience in Dynamic-World Planning. Doctoral Dissertation,
- University of Maryland (College Park), Department of Computer Science.
- Technical report CS-TR-2899, UMIACS-TR-92-55, May 1992.
-
- Also available as University of Maryland Systems Research Center
- technical report Ph.D. 92-5.
-
- Also available through University Microfilms International, Order
- Number 9234663.
-
-
-