Semantic Aspects of Negation as Schema 


Vol. 9,  No. 1, pp. 23-28, Feb.  2002
10.3745/KIPSTB.2002.9.1.23


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  Abstract

A fundamental problem in building an intelligent agent is that an agent does not understand the meaning of its perception or its action. One reason that an agent cannot understand the world is partially caused by a syntactic approach that converts a semantic feature into a simple string. To solve this problem, Cohen introduces a semantic approach that an agent autonomously learns a meaningful representation of physical schemas, on which some advanced conceptual structures are built, from physically interacting with environment using its own sensors and effectors. However, Cohen does not deal with a meta level of conceptual primitive that makes recognizing a schema possible. We propose that negation is a meta schema that enables an agent to recognize a physical schema. We prove some semantic aspects of negation.

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  Cite this article

[IEEE Style]

K. S. Tae, "Semantic Aspects of Negation as Schema," The KIPS Transactions:PartB , vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 23-28, 2002. DOI: 10.3745/KIPSTB.2002.9.1.23.

[ACM Style]

Kang Soo Tae. 2002. Semantic Aspects of Negation as Schema. The KIPS Transactions:PartB , 9, 1, (2002), 23-28. DOI: 10.3745/KIPSTB.2002.9.1.23.