AIApr 26, 2023

The Roles of Symbols in Neural-based AI: They are Not What You Think!

arXiv:2304.13626v16 citationsh-index: 84
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the role of symbols in AI, offering a novel perspective that could influence the design of intelligent systems, though it appears incremental in reinterpreting existing concepts.

The paper argues that symbols serve as external communication tools and internal self-communication aids, rather than fundamental building blocks of thought, and proposes a neuro-symbolic architecture for intelligent agents.

We propose that symbols are first and foremost external communication tools used between intelligent agents that allow knowledge to be transferred in a more efficient and effective manner than having to experience the world directly. But, they are also used internally within an agent through a form of self-communication to help formulate, describe and justify subsymbolic patterns of neural activity that truly implement thinking. Symbols, and our languages that make use of them, not only allow us to explain our thinking to others and ourselves, but also provide beneficial constraints (inductive bias) on learning about the world. In this paper we present relevant insights from neuroscience and cognitive science, about how the human brain represents symbols and the concepts they refer to, and how today's artificial neural networks can do the same. We then present a novel neuro-symbolic hypothesis and a plausible architecture for intelligent agents that combines subsymbolic representations for symbols and concepts for learning and reasoning. Our hypothesis and associated architecture imply that symbols will remain critical to the future of intelligent systems NOT because they are the fundamental building blocks of thought, but because they are characterizations of subsymbolic processes that constitute thought.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes