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The Soar Cognitive Architecture (The MIT Press)

John E. Laird, Robert E. Wray III, Yongjia Wang, Nate Derbinsky, Andrew M. Nuxoll, Scott Lathrop, Samuel Wintermute, Robert P. Marinier III, Nicholas Gorski, Joseph Xu · 1 HN comments
HN Books has aggregated all Hacker News stories and comments that mention "The Soar Cognitive Architecture (The MIT Press)" by John E. Laird, Robert E. Wray III, Yongjia Wang, Nate Derbinsky, Andrew M. Nuxoll, Scott Lathrop, Samuel Wintermute, Robert P. Marinier III, Nicholas Gorski, Joseph Xu.
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Amazon Summary
The definitive presentation of Soar, one AI's most enduring architectures, offering comprehensive descriptions of fundamental aspects and new components. In development for thirty years, Soar is a general cognitive architecture that integrates knowledge-intensive reasoning, reactive execution, hierarchical reasoning, planning, and learning from experience, with the goal of creating a general computational system that has the same cognitive abilities as humans. In contrast, most AI systems are designed to solve only one type of problem, such as playing chess, searching the Internet, or scheduling aircraft departures. Soar is both a software system for agent development and a theory of what computational structures are necessary to support human-level agents. Over the years, both software system and theory have evolved. This book offers the definitive presentation of Soar from theoretical and practical perspectives, providing comprehensive descriptions of fundamental aspects and new components.The current version of Soar features major extensions, adding reinforcement learning, semantic memory, episodic memory, mental imagery, and an appraisal-based model of emotion. This book describes details of Soar's component memories and processes and offers demonstrations of individual components, components working in combination, and real-world applications. Beyond these functional considerations, the book also proposes requirements for general cognitive architectures and explicitly evaluates how well Soar meets those requirements.
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I didn't exactly build anything in terms of creating anything new. I'm in a phase right now where I'm doing a lot of reading and background research. So I just finished reading Laird's SOAR book[1], and the second volume of Goertzel's Engineering General Intelligence[2]. Now I'm working on finishing Pinker's Words and Rules[3].

On the more hands-on front, all I really did was download the source for the various components of OpenCog[4], build them, and get all of that stuff installed. The plan for the next little while is to start playing around with building simple systems with OpenCog and SOAR[5] and gain a deeper understanding of both.

So yeah, wish I had something more exciting to talk about, but that's just where things are for me right now.

[1]: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0262122960/

[2]: https://www.amazon.com/Engineering-General-Intelligence-Part...

[3]: https://www.amazon.com/Words-Rules-Ingredients-Language-Scie...

[4]: https://opencog.org/

[5]: https://soar.eecs.umich.edu/

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