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  1. What Sort of Taxonomy of Causation Do We Need for Language Understanding?Yorick Wilks - 1977 - Cognitive Science 1 (3):235-264.
    A proposal is made concerning the introduction of the notions of cause and reason into a natural language understanding system. Its hypothesis is that one should prefer rational explanations of actions when dealing with human, or human‐like, agents, if one can find them in what one is analyzing, but that in other, nonhuman, cases one should prefer causal explanations. The reader is reminded of the existing state of the preference semantics system, and then are described the changes that would have (...)
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  • A preferential, pattern-seeking, Semantics for natural language inference.Yorick Wilks - 1975 - Artificial Intelligence 6 (1):53-74.
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  • A Framework for Representing Knowledge.Marvin Minsky - unknown
    It seems to me that the ingredients of most theories both in Artificial Intelligence and in Psychology have been on the whole too minute, local, and unstructured to account–either practically or phenomenologically–for the effectiveness of common-sense thought. The "chunks" of reasoning, language, memory, and "perception" ought to be larger and more structured; their factual and procedural contents must be more intimately connected in order to explain the apparent power and speed of mental activities.
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  • The structure of a semantic theory.Jerrold Katz & Jerry Fodor - 1963 - Language 39:170-210.
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  • A framed painting: The representation of a common sense knowledge fragment.E. Charniak - 1977 - Cognitive Science 1 (4):355-394.
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  • An Overview of KRL, a Knowledge Representation Language.Daniel G. Bobrow & Terry Winograd - 1977 - Cognitive Science 1 (1):3-46.
    This paper describes KRL, a Knowledge Representation Language designed for use in understander systems. It outlines both the general concepts which underlie our research and the details of KRL‐0, an experimental implementation of some of these concepts. KRL is an attempt to integrate procedural knowledge with a broad base of declarative forms. These forms provide a variety of ways to express the logical structure of the knowledge, in order to give flexibility in associating procedures (for memory and reasoning) with specific (...)
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