The emergence of enhanced intelligence in a brain-inspired cognitive architecture

The Causal Cognitive Architecture is a brain-inspired cognitive architecture developed from the hypothesis that the navigation circuits in the ancestors of mammals duplicated to eventually form the neocortex. Thus, millions of neocortical minicolumns are functionally modeled in the architecture as m...

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Published in:Frontiers in computational neuroscience Vol. 18; p. 1367712
Main Author: Schneider, Howard
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 07-05-2024
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Summary:The Causal Cognitive Architecture is a brain-inspired cognitive architecture developed from the hypothesis that the navigation circuits in the ancestors of mammals duplicated to eventually form the neocortex. Thus, millions of neocortical minicolumns are functionally modeled in the architecture as millions of "navigation maps." An investigation of a cognitive architecture based on these navigation maps has previously shown that modest changes in the architecture allow the ready emergence of human cognitive abilities such as grounded, full causal decision-making, full analogical reasoning, and near-full compositional language abilities. In this study, additional biologically plausible modest changes to the architecture are considered and show the emergence of super-human planning abilities. The architecture should be considered as a viable alternative pathway toward the development of more advanced artificial intelligence, as well as to give insight into the emergence of natural human intelligence.
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Reviewed by: Aleksandr Nikolaevich Raikov, National Supercomputer Center, China
Edited by: Yuqi Han, Beijing Institute of Technology, China
Yu Xie, Beijing Institute of Technology, China
ISSN:1662-5188
1662-5188
DOI:10.3389/fncom.2024.1367712