2013 IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence for Human-like Intelligence (CIHLI)
CIHLI 2013 is the first IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence for Human-like Intelligence. The main goal of the Symposium is to promote and advance research activities related to all facets of human-like intelligence. In many research domains the existing state-of-the-art CI solutions significantly differ from the human competence level. Even though it is generally not clear whether human-like approach would show its upper-hand over existing methods, the exploration of this research path seems to be advantageous and challenging.
Symposium topics of interest include, among others, problem solving based on intuition, creativity, insight, curiosity and imagination; the use of spatio-temporal signal properties; chunk-based representations; hierarchical knowledge representation; the role of motivation in autonomous behavior; guiding role of emotions in discovery; machine consciousness; lifelong learning, transfer learning and multitask learning; cognitively-plausible architectures and systems.
The final technical program consists of 17 submissions divided among three different sessions. The Symposium has brought together scientists interested in theoretical developments in the area of cognitive science and in designing solutions to various engineering, AI, optimization and control problems inspired by and competing with the human level intelligence.