Scientific Discovery Processes in Humans and Computers: Theory and Research in Psychology and Artificial Intelligence

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Bloomsbury Academic, May 30, 2000 - Psychology - 216 pages
Wagman offers a critical analysis of current theory and research in the psychological and computational sciences, directed toward the elucidation of scientific discovery processes and structures. It discusses human scientific discovery processes, analyzes computer scientific discovery processes, and makes a comparative evaluation of the two. This work examines the scientific reasoning of the discoverers of the inhibition mechanism of gene control; scientific discovery heuristics used at different developmental levels; artificial intelligence and mathematical discovery; the ECHO system; the evolution of artificial intelligence discovery systems; the PAULI system; and the KEKADA system. It concludes with an examination of the extent to which computational discovery systems can emulate a set of 10 types of scientific problems.

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Contents

Conceptual Discovery in Molecular Genetics
7
Scientific Discovery Heuristics and Developmental Level
49
Mathematical Discovery
67
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About the author (2000)

MORTON WAGMAN is Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign./e

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