Think! Evidence

Deep Analogical Inference as the Origin of Hypotheses

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dc.creator Blokpoel, Mark
dc.creator Wareham, Todd
dc.creator Haselager, Pim
dc.creator Toni, Ivan
dc.creator van Rooij, Iris
dc.date.accessioned 2020-02-25T12:32:45Z
dc.date.available 2020-02-25T12:32:45Z
dc.identifier https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/jps/vol11/iss1/3
dc.identifier.uri https://evidence.thinkportal.org/handle/123456789/32312
dc.identifier.uri https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/jps/vol11/iss1/3
dc.description The ability to generate novel hypotheses is an important problem-solving capacity of humans. This ability is vital for making sense of the complex and unfamiliar world we live in. Often, this capacity is characterized as an inference to the best explanation—selecting the “best” explanation from a given set of candidate hypotheses. However, it remains unclear where these candidate hypotheses originate from. In this paper we contribute to computationally explaining these origins by providing the contours of the computational problem solved when humans generate hypotheses. The origin of hypotheses, otherwise known as abduction proper, is hallmarked by seven properties: (1) isotropy, (2) open-endedness, (3) novelty, (4) groundedness, (5) sensibility, (6) psychological realism, and (7) computational tractability. In this paper we provide a computational-level theory of abduction proper that unifies the first six of these properties and lays the groundwork for the seventh property of computational tractability. We conjecture that abduction proper is best seen as a process of deep analogical inference.
dc.description
dc.subject abductive inference
dc.subject hypothesis generation
dc.subject analogy
dc.subject computational-level model
dc.title Deep Analogical Inference as the Origin of Hypotheses
dc.type Special Issue: Internal Representations in Human Problem Solving-Part 2


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