The article is free.  I think scribd is trying to make some money for itself.  
Did not know that.  Sign up for a scribd account and you should be able to 
download it for free.  or instead I can e-mail it to you personally if you 
prefer.Let me know which way you want to go. 
The goal is to have the infant develop into a more mature general intelligence.
Some compression may be done on the audio video streams but largely those 
percepts will be represented internally as monads. 

Humans are very complex, PAM-P2 will be less so.
~PM

> Date: Fri, 8 Nov 2013 18:10:59 -0500
> Subject: Re: [agi] Rules + Big Data
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> 
> On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 5:11 PM, Piaget Modeler
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > Achieve infant intelligence a la Piaget.
> 
> Is the goal to test Piaget's theories of childhood development, or is
> the goal to hope that the infant AI will develop into an adult AI?
> 
> I'm not sure how you could conduct such tests. For example, in the
> A-not-B test ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A-not-B_error ) there are
> competing explanations, but it seems you could build a model to
> produce whatever results you want without answering the question.
> 
> > see Serving up Minds paper on the site (http://piagetmodeler.tumblr.com).
> 
> Really, you put your essay behind a paywall?
> 
> > The design is complete for now. There are always open questions in basic 
> > research, we will tackle them as they arise but for now I think we have a 
> > well defined system to do (i) ontology formation (ii) goal selection (ii) 
> > goal achievement.
> 
> Do you need that for an infant intelligence? It seems that one thing
> you do need, even at the sensory-motor stage, is a lot of computing
> power to handle vision, hearing, and movement. I realize that neural
> pattern recognition circuits are still shallow in young brains, but
> this doesn't make the problem easier. A child's brain has more
> synapses than an adult. Have you thought about how to test your models
> if you can't run experiments lasting years on a 1 petaflop computer?
> 
> Also, we tend to thing of the infant mind as a blank slate, but it
> really is very complex. Human DNA has about the same information
> content as 300 million lines of code.
> 
> -- 
> -- Matt Mahoney, [email protected]
> 
> 
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