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Lior Assouline's avatar

Great ideas! Your ideas as HC as a sequence of sensory perception learning makes so much more sense.

I have a question regarding HC in humans which I suppose handle learning sensory as well as more abstract "features" sequences. I'm also assuming intelligence as repurposing navigation capabilities in a mental representations hyperspace, and problem solving as finding a mental "way" to an abstact "target".

In your paper you give the HC planning and schema transfer capabilites ie, requirements for general intelligence. In patient H.M specifically, even without HC, intelligence was normal (in 1967 milner paper, they even saw arithmetic capabities improvement) so he was able to use previously learned sequence of abstract representations to solve daily tasks . How do you think he was able to achieve it without an HC ?

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Jacob Everist's avatar

Absolutely lovely visuals and explanations. I've thought a lot about this too, but I'm glad someone has tackled it more thoroughly.

To turn sequence learning into a map, does the agent require exhaustive exploration of the environment, or can it somehow extrapolate or predict its destination if it, say, takes a short cut? I always struggled with this missing component from the discussions at Numenta and have been working on trying to find a solution.

Not all input spaces can be exhaustively explored like the rate maze, so we would need some form of vector addition or cognitive space interpolation to navigate complex environments. Vectors don't seem to exist in the brain like we hope (directions and magnitudes do), so the tools like sequence learning, perceptual clones, place cells, and grid cells need to be combined somehow to enable this spatial interpolation.

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