"Semiosis is the performance element involving signs. Although a human can 
communicate many things unintentionally, individuals usually speak or write to 
elicit some kind of response. Yet there is little real explanation of how 
semiosis produces its effects, which is odd given that the word "sign" is in 
everyday use and most people would understand what it means. But semiotics has 
not offered clear technical definitions, nor is there agreement about how signs 
should be classified.As an insect or animal, human or otherwise, moves through 
its environment (sometimes termed the umwelt), all the senses collect data that 
are made available to the brain. However, to prevent sensory overload, only 
salient data will receive the full attention of the cognitive elements of the 
mind. This indicates that a part of the process must be controlled by a model 
of the real world capable of ranking data elements in terms of their 
significance and filtering out the data irrelevant to survival. A sign cannot 
function until the brain or audience distinguishes it from the background 
noise. When this happens, the sign then triggerscognitive activity to interpret 
the data input and so convert it into meaningful information. This would 
suggest that, in the semiosphere, the process of semiosis goes through the 
following cycle:The plant, insect, or animal with the need to communicate 
(e.g., to recognise an object of food) will know what needs to be said and 
assess the best means of saying it (e.g., starting a searching behaviour);This 
information will then be encoded and relevant muscle groups will effect 
transmission — although to some extent intentional in the human, the actual 
movements of the body are autonomic, i.e. the individual is not aware of moving 
individual muscles, but achieves the desired result by an act of will (see H. 
L. A. Hart on the nature of an action);The audience filters ambient data and 
perceives the uttered code as a grouping of signs;The audience then interprets 
the signs (sometimes termed decoding) to attribute meaning. This involves 
matching the signs received against existing patterns and their meanings held 
in memory (i.e. it is learned and understood within the community). In plants, 
insects and animals, the results of a successful interpretation will be an 
observable response to the stimuli perceived.In biology, scout bees and ants 
will return home to tell the others where food is to be found, the fact of 
fertility must be announced to prospective mates from the same species, and the 
presence of danger must be passed as a warning to others in the group. Such 
transmission may be chemical, auditory, visual, or tactile whether singly or in 
combination. There is a new field of research activity termed biosemiotics, and 
Jesper Hoffmeyer claims that endosymbiosis, self-reference, code duality, the 
availability of receptors, autopoiesis, and others are the general properties 
of all living systems. Thomas Sebeok suggests that a similar list of properties 
for life may coincide with the definition of semiosis, i.e. that the test of 
whether something is alive, is a test to determine whether and how it 
communicates meaning to another of its kind, i.e., whether it has semiosis. 
This has been called the Sebeok's Thesis.For humans, semiosis is an aspect of 
the wider systems of social interaction in which information is exchanged. It 
can result in particular types of social encounter, but the process itself can 
be constrained by social conventions such as propriety, privacy, and 
disclosure. This means that no social encounter is reducible to semiosis alone, 
and that semiosis can only be understood by identifying and exploring all the 
conditions that make the transmission and reception of signs possible and 
effective. When two individuals meet, the ways in which they think, the 
specific identities they assume, the emotional responses they make, and the 
beliefs, motives, and purposes they have, will frame the situation as it 
develops dynamically and potentially test the legitimacy of the outcomes. All 
these elements are, to a greater or lesser extent, semiotic in nature in that 
prevailing codes and values are being applied. Consequently, where the line is 
drawn between semiosis and semiotics will always be somewhat arbitrary."

Date: Fri, 5 Apr 2013 21:14:02 -0400
Subject: Re: [agi] Semiosis
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

No no no no no.Yes, pointing to something or otherwise signifying some relation 
by 'pointing it out' or 'pointedly drawing your attention to it' is an 
important part of communication.  But semiotics... No. There is no there there.


On Fri, Apr 5, 2013 at 8:41 PM, Piaget Modeler <[email protected]> 
wrote:




A preliminary approach...
http://www.library.utoronto.ca/see/SEED/Vol3-2/Queiroz_3-2.htm

Thoughts?
~PM


From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [agi] Semiosis
Date: Fri, 5 Apr 2013 14:52:30 -0700





http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semiosis
Your thoughts on algorithms for Semiosis.
Cheers,

~PM                                       


  
    
      
      AGI | Archives

 | Modify
 Your Subscription


      
    
  

                                          


  
    
      
      AGI | Archives

 | Modify
 Your Subscription


      
    
  








  
    
      
      AGI | Archives

 | Modify
 Your Subscription


      
    
  

                                          


-------------------------------------------
AGI
Archives: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/303/=now
RSS Feed: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/rss/303/21088071-f452e424
Modify Your Subscription: 
https://www.listbox.com/member/?member_id=21088071&id_secret=21088071-58d57657
Powered by Listbox: http://www.listbox.com

Reply via email to