A Behavioural Foundation for Natural Computing and a Programmability Test
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
What does it mean to claim that a physical or natural system computes? One answer, endorsed here, is that computing is about programming a system to behave in different ways. This paper offers an account of what it means for a physical system to compute based on this notion. It proposes a behavioural characterisation of computing in terms of a measure of programmability, which reflects a system's ability to react to external stimuli. The proposed measure of programmability is useful for classifying computers in terms of the apparent algorithmic complexity of their evolution in time. I make some specific proposals in this connection and discuss this approach in the context of other behavioural approaches, notably Turing's test of machine intelligence. I also anticipate possible objections and consider the applicability of these proposals to the task of relating abstract computation to nature-like computation.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Jun-17-2013
- Country:
- Europe > United Kingdom > England (0.28)
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- Health & Medicine (0.93)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- Cognitive Science (0.46)
- History (0.67)
- Issues > Turing's Test (0.67)
- Machine Learning (0.68)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence