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Cognitive Architecture (ACT-R)

1990
  • John R. Anderson
Cognitive architecture research setup with ACT-R cognitive models and simulations.

(generated image for illustration only)

ACT-R (Adaptive Control of Thought—Rational) is a cognitive architecture defining the basic, fixed structures of the human mind. It models cognition as a set of independent modules, such as perceptual, motor, and declarative memory, that interact through a central production system. Information is held in buffers, and production rules fire to manipulate this information, simulating human problem-solving and learning processes.

The ACT-R architecture is a hybrid system that integrates both symbolic and subsymbolic processing. At its core is a production system, where knowledge is encoded as IF-THEN rules (procedural memory). These rules compete to fire based on the current contents of various buffers, which hold small chunks of information from different modules (e.g., visual, goal, declarative memory). The declarative memory module stores factual knowledge as chunks.

The selection of which rule to fire is not purely symbolic; it is guided by subsymbolic calculations. Each production rule has a utility value, calculated based on the probability of achieving the current goal and the associated costs and rewards. Similarly, chunks in declarative memory have an activation level, determined by their history of use (base-level activation) and their relevance to the current context (spreading activation). This subsymbolic layer allows the model to learn from experience and adapt its behavior in a rational, optimized manner, mirroring human performance data with high fidelity. This integration allows ACT-R to make quantitative predictions about human behavior, including reaction times and error rates.

UNESCO Nomenclature: 6105
– Experimental psychology

Type

Abstract System

Disruption

Substantial

Usage

Widespread Use

Precursors

  • human information processing theories
  • production systems developed by Allen Newell and Herbert A. Simon
  • early work on memory models (e.g., Atkinson-Shiffrin model)
  • general problem solver (GPS) program

Applications

  • intelligent tutoring systems
  • human-computer interaction analysis
  • predicting driver distraction
  • neuroimaging data interpretation
  • modeling learning processes in education

Patents:

NA

Potential Innovations Ideas

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Related to: ACT-R, cognitive architecture, production system, declarative memory, procedural memory, cognitive modeling, John R. Anderson, symbolic model, subsymbolic, human-computer interaction.

Historical Context

1941
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1990
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1990
1990

(if date is unknown or not relevant, e.g. "fluid mechanics", a rounded estimation of its notable emergence is provided)

Related Invention, Innovation & Technical Principles

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