Medical and Hospital News  
TECH SPACE
Psychology Theory Enables Computers To Mimic Human Creativity

File image.
by Staff Writers
Troy NY (SPX) Dec 02, 2010
A dealer in antique coins gets an offer to buy a beautiful bronze coin. The coin has an emperor's head on one side and the date "544 B.C." stamped on the other. The dealer examines the coin, but instead of buying it, he calls the police. Why?

Solving this "insight problem" requires creativity, a skill at which humans excel (the coin is a fake - "B.C." and Arabic numerals did not exist at the time) and computers do not.

Now, a new explanation of how humans solve problems creatively - including the mathematical formulations for facilitating the incorporation of the theory in artificial intelligence programs - provides a roadmap to building systems that perform like humans at the task.

Ron Sun, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute professor of cognitive science, said the new "Explicit-Implicit Interaction Theory," recently introduced in an article in Psychological Review, could be used for future artificial intelligence.

"As a psychological theory, this theory pushes forward the field of research on creative problem solving and offers an explanation of the human mind and how we solve problems creatively," Sun said. "But this model can also be used as the basis for creating future artificial intelligence programs that are good at solving problems creatively."

The paper, titled "Incubation, Insight, and Creative Problem Solving: A Unified Theory and a Connectionist Model," by Sun and Sebastien Helie of University of California, Santa Barbara, appeared in the July edition of Psychological Review.

Discussion of the theory is accompanied by mathematical specifications for the "CLARION" cognitive architecture - a computer program developed by Sun's research group to act like a cognitive system - as well as successful computer simulations of the theory.

In the paper, Sun and Helie compare the performance of the CLARION model using "Explicit-Implicit Interaction" theory with results from previous human trials - including tests involving the coin question - and found results to be nearly identical in several aspects of problem solving.

In the tests involving the coin question, human subjects were given a chance to respond after being interrupted either to discuss their thought process or to work on an unrelated task. In that experiment, 35.6 percent of participants answered correctly after discussing their thinking, while 45.8 percent of participants answered correctly after working on another task.

In 5,000 runs of the CLARION program set for similar interruptions, CLARION answered correctly 35.3 percent of the time in the first instance, and 45.3 percent of the time in the second instance.

"The simulation data matches the human data very well," said Sun.

Explicit-Implicit Interaction theory is the most recent advance on a well-regarded outline of creative problem solving known as "Stage Decomposition," developed by Graham Wallas in his seminal 1926 book "The Art of Thought." According to stage decomposition, humans go through four stages - preparation, incubation, insight (illumination), and verification - in solving problems creatively.

Building on Wallas' work, several disparate theories have since been advanced to explain the specific processes used by the human mind during the stages of incubation and insight.

Competing theories propose that incubation - a period away from deliberative work - is a time of recovery from fatigue of deliberative work, an opportunity for the mind to work unconsciously on the problem, a time during which the mind discards false assumptions, or a time in which solutions to similar problems are retrieved from memory, among other ideas.

Each theory can be represented mathematically in artificial intelligence models. However, most models choose between theories rather than seeking to incorporate multiple theories and therefore they are fragmentary at best.

Sun and Helie's Explicit-Implicit Interaction (EII) theory integrates several of the competing theories into a larger equation.

"EII unifies a lot of fragmentary pre-existing theories," Sun said. "These pre-existing theories only account for some aspects of creative problem solving, but not in a unified way. EII unifies those fragments and provides a more coherent, more complete theory."

The basic principles of EII propose the coexistence of two different types of knowledge and processing: explicit and implicit. Explicit knowledge is easier to access and verbalize, can be rendered symbolically, and requires more attention to process. Implicit knowledge is relatively inaccessible, harder to verbalize, and is more vague and requires less attention to process.

In solving a problem, explicit knowledge could be the knowledge used in reasoning, deliberately thinking through different options, while implicit knowledge is the intuition that gives rise to a solution suddenly.

Both types of knowledge are involved simultaneously to solve a problem and reinforce each other in the process. By including this principle in each step, Sun was able to achieve a successful system.

"This tells us how creative problem solving may emerge from the interaction of explicit and implicit cognitive processes; why both types of processes are necessary for creative problem solving, as well as in many other psychological domains and functionalities," said Sun.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Space Technology News - Applications and Research



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


TECH SPACE
India software czar gives 2 bln dlrs of shares to charity
Mumbai (AFP) Dec 1, 2010
Indian software tycoon Azim Premji said Wednesday he would donate two billion dollars in shares to a new charitable trust for education. Premji, known as India's Bill Gates for his pledge to give away most of his 17-billion-dollar fortune, said he is transferring to the trust 213 million shares - worth two billion dollars - in his company, Wipro. The trust will fund non-profit programm ... read more







TECH SPACE
Pakistan's flood aid 'unspent and mismanaged'

Nearly 100 children hurt in China school stampede: report

S.Korea activists urge rescue of dogs left on shelled island

Seven killed as bridge collapses in China

TECH SPACE
GPS Satellite Achieves 20 Years On-Orbit

World-Leading Spatial Experts Meet In Sydney

Space Ministers Emphasise Priority To Deliver Galileo And GMES

New Simulator Offers Ability To Record And Replay GLONASS And GPS

TECH SPACE
Apes Unwilling To Gamble When Odds Are Uncertain

Jet-Lagged And Forgetful? It's No Coincidence

Single drop of blood could reveal age

Study Reveals Neural Basis Of Rapid Brain Adaptation

TECH SPACE
One in ten Finnish species threatened: environment ministry

Damage to U.S. birds by cats: $17 billion

Bird conservancy hails forest policy

Wild elephants electrocuted in China: report

TECH SPACE
South Africa's anti-AIDS drugs reach a million people

Ex-official implicates two Chinese leaders in AIDS scandal

US vows to fight AIDS until it's gone

AIDS awareness boosts global health funding

TECH SPACE
Chinese micro-blog re-emerges after shutdown

Empty chair for Liu at Nobel ceremony: activist

China harassing Mongols ahead of dissident release: activist

China overturns 10 percent of death sentences

TECH SPACE
Piracy sidelines third of Taiwan's Indian Ocean tuna fleet

Dutch navy arrests 20 Somalis over S.African yacht attack

Chinese crew fights off pirates near Somalia

Pirates seize ship with 29 Chinese sailors aboard: Xinhua

TECH SPACE
Asia-Pacific's investment banking revenues hit all-time high

China vows to tighten monetary policy in 2011: Xinhua

Motorola mobile division expects first quarter loss

China leads Asia-wide acceleration in manufacturing: surveys


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement