07691nam 2200457 450 991083052640332120230717202230.01-394-22581-41-394-22579-2(MiAaPQ)EBC7265658(Au-PeEL)EBL7265658(EXLCZ)992723469930004120230717d2023 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierFundamental generation systems computer science and artificial consciousness, the informational field of generation of the universe, the sixth sense of living beings /Alain Cardon, Abdelkhalak El HamiLondon, England :ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,[2023]©20231 online resource (226 pages)Print version: Cardon, Alain Fundamental Generation Systems Newark : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,c2023 9781786308733 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Systems and their Designs -- 1.1. System modeling -- 1.1.1. Traditional systems -- 1.1.2. Complex systems -- 1.1.3. Systems of systems -- 1.2. Autonomous systems -- 1.3. Multi-agent systems -- 1.4. Organizations and systems -- 1.5. The problem of modeling an autonomous system -- 1.6. Agents and multi-agent systems -- 1.6.1. The weak notion of an agent -- 1.6.2. The strong notion of an agent -- 1.6.3. Cognitive agents and reactive agents -- 1.6.4. Multi-agent systems -- 1.6.5. MAS with reactive agents -- 1.6.6. MAS with cognitive agents -- Chapter 2. Reliability of Autonomous Systems -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. Dependability of a system -- 2.2.1. General concepts -- 2.2.2. Failure and repair rates -- 2.2.3. Average estimators -- 2.2.4. Some methodological tools -- 2.3. Reliability diagram -- 2.3.1. Series system -- 2.3.2. Parallel system -- 2.3.3. Mixed system -- 2.3.4. More complex systems -- 2.3.5. Fault tree -- 2.4. Reliability networks -- 2.4.1. Partial graph associated with a subset of components -- 2.4.2. Reliability network and structure function -- 2.4.3. Properties of reliability networks -- 2.4.4. Length and width of a reliability network -- 2.4.5. Equivalence between structure function and reliability network -- 2.4.6. Construction and simplification of reliability networks -- Chapter 3. Artificial Intelligence, Communication Systems and Artificial Consciousness -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Evolution of computer science -- 3.3. Evolution of artificial intelligence -- 3.4. Radical evolution of computing and AI towards fully communicating systems -- 3.5. The computer representation of an artificial consciousness -- Chapter 4. The Informational Substrate of the Universe and the Organizational Law -- 4.1. Introduction.4.2. The fundamental principles of the informational model of generation of the Universe -- 4.2.1. First fundamental concept: the foundation of the Universe by a generative information system -- 4.2.2. Second fundamental concept: informational character of the Universe with its substrate -- 4.2.3. Third fundamental concept: the organizational law of generation of the Universe -- 4.2.4. Fourth fundamental concept: the informational energy of the substrate of the Universe -- 4.3. The notion of generating information in the Universe -- 4.3.1. The information field of a component -- 4.3.2. The informational activity component and its information envelope -- 4.3.3. Fifth fundamental concept: self-control in the organization of the Universe -- 4.3.4. Generative information -- 4.3.5. Organizational tendency of the Universe and informational envelopes -- Chapter 5. The Informational Interpretation of Living Things -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. Origin of living things with bifurcation of the organizational law -- 5.2.1. Sixth fundamental concept: the production of living things on Earth -- 5.2.2. Bifurcation of the organizational law -- 5.2.3. Seventh fundamental concept: the central rule of organizational law in living things -- 5.2.4. The principle of action of the organizational law for the generation of living things -- 5.2.5. The life span of a living organism -- 5.2.6. The unification of the informational envelope with the membrane -- 5.2.7. The creation of sexual reproduction -- 5.2.8. Reasons for the production of new organisms -- 5.3. The informational action of reproduction of living things -- 5.3.1. The fundamental rule of the organizational law that formed living beings -- 5.3.2. Morphological patterns -- 5.3.3. The influence of an external morphological pattern on a living organism -- 5.3.4. Brain formation and sensory comprehension.5.3.5. The external organizational attractors hypothesis -- 5.3.6. The possibility of predicting the future of any situation in progress -- 5.4. The human species in the organizational evolution of living things -- 5.4.1. Creation of Homo sapiens as a result of very strong evolution -- 5.4.2. Organizational action of the formation of the human brain -- 5.4.3. The importance of informational links between groups of humans -- 5.4.4. Power of group participation in humans -- Chapter 6. The Interpretation of Neuronal Aggregates -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.1.1. Form of a thought -- 6.1.2. Constructivist definition of the notion of mental representation -- 6.2. The systemic layer and the regulators including the informational regulator -- 6.2.1. Systemic layer of the psychic system -- 6.2.2. Regulators -- 6.2.3. The voluntary choice of the operated aim in the psychic system -- 6.2.4. The aggregate-regulator rule of co-activity -- 6.2.5. Morphological role of regulators -- 6.2.6. Process of intentionally producing a representation on a desired theme -- 6.2.7. The organizational immersion regulator in an informational state -- Chapter 7. The Sense of Informational Comprehension of Living Organisms: The Sixth Sense -- 7.1. Introduction -- 7.2. The five usual senses and the use of the informational substrate -- 7.2.1. The case of animals -- 7.2.2. The case of plants -- 7.3. The sense of informational comprehension or the sixth sense -- 7.3.1. The implicit communication process of the sixth sense -- 7.3.2. The voluntary process of informational communication -- 7.3.3. The solicitation of the sixth sense and the comprehension of the informational substrate -- 7.3.4. The cognitive and sensitive interpretation of the information forms received -- 7.4. Common use of the sixth sense -- 7.4.1. Common use of the sixth sense in animals and humans.7.4.2. The action of the sixth sense for hypnosis, the power of magnetism and meditation -- 7.4.3. The notion of premonition and the sixth sense -- 7.4.4. Thoughts and the safeguarding of the world -- Conclusion -- Appendices -- Appendix 1. Binomial Distribution -- Appendix 2. Geometric Distribution -- Appendix 3. Poisson Distribution -- Appendix 4. Exponential Distribution -- Appendix 5. Normal Distribution -- Appendix 6. Lognormal Distribution -- Appendix 7. Weibull Distribution -- Appendix 8. Pareto Distribution -- Appendix 9. Distribution of Extreme Values -- Appendix 10. Asymptotic Distributions -- References -- Index -- EULA.Computer scienceEngineeringComputer science.Engineering.004.0973Cardon Alain1600997MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910830526403321Fundamental generation systems3937414UNINA