A Rational Distributed Process-level Account of Independence Judgment
Nobandegani, Ardavan S., Psaromiligkos, Ioannis N.
It is inconceivable how chaotic the world would look to humans, faced with innumerable decisions a day to be made under uncertainty, had they been lacking the capacity to distinguish the relevant from the irrelevant---a capacity which computationally amounts to handling probabilistic independence relations. The highly parallel and distributed computational machinery of the brain suggests that a satisfying process-level account of human independence judgment should also mimic these features. In this work, we present the first rational, distributed, message-passing, process-level account of independence judgment, called $\mathcal{D}^\ast$. Interestingly, $\mathcal{D}^\ast$ shows a curious, but normatively-justified tendency for quick detection of dependencies, whenever they hold. Furthermore, $\mathcal{D}^\ast$ outperforms all the previously proposed algorithms in the AI literature in terms of worst-case running time, and a salient aspect of it is supported by recent work in neuroscience investigating possible implementations of Bayes nets at the neural level. $\mathcal{D}^\ast$ nicely exemplifies how the pursuit of cognitive plausibility can lead to the discovery of state-of-the-art algorithms with appealing properties, and its simplicity makes $\mathcal{D}^\ast$ potentially a good candidate for pedagogical purposes.
Jan-30-2018
- Country:
- Europe > United Kingdom
- England > Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.04)
- North America > Canada
- Europe > United Kingdom
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.50)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Neurology (0.34)