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      Cognitive Mimetics for Designing Intelligent Technologies

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      Advances in Human-Computer Interaction
      Hindawi Limited

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          Abstract

          Design mimetics is an important method of creation in technology design. Here, we review design mimetics as a plausible approach to address the problem of how to design generally intelligent technology. We argue that design mimetics can be conceptually divided into three levels based on the source of imitation. Biomimetics focuses on the structural similarities between systems in nature and technical solutions for solving design problems. In robotics, the sensory-motor systems of humans and animals are a source of design solutions. At the highest level, we introduce the concept of cognitive mimetics, in which the source for imitation is human information processing. We review and discuss some historical examples of cognitive mimetics, its potential uses, methods, levels, and current applications, and how to test its success. We conclude by a practical example showing how cognitive mimetics can be a highly valuable complimentary approach for pattern matching and machine learning based design of artificial intelligence (AI) for solving specific human-AI interaction design problems.

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          SOAR: An architecture for general intelligence

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            Biomimetics: its practice and theory.

            Biomimetics, a name coined by Otto Schmitt in the 1950s for the transfer of ideas and analogues from biology to technology, has produced some significant and successful devices and concepts in the past 50 years, but is still empirical. We show that TRIZ, the Russian system of problem solving, can be adapted to illuminate and manipulate this process of transfer. Analysis using TRIZ shows that there is only 12% similarity between biology and technology in the principles which solutions to problems illustrate, and while technology solves problems largely by manipulating usage of energy, biology uses information and structure, two factors largely ignored by technology.
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              Elements of a theory of human problem solving.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Advances in Human-Computer Interaction
                Advances in Human-Computer Interaction
                Hindawi Limited
                1687-5893
                1687-5907
                August 01 2018
                August 01 2018
                : 2018
                : 1-9
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of Jyväskylä, 40014 Jyväskylä, Finland
                Article
                10.1155/2018/9215863
                989bc69d-8274-434f-9273-a388ecc4d7f5
                © 2018

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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