BibSonomy :: bibtex  ::

tag user group author concept BibTeX key search:all search:markvanheeswijk
A blue social bookmark and publication sharing system.
tags · relations · groups · popular
help · blog · about
login · register
markvanheeswijk's BibTeX entry:  

Self-Organizing Maps as Traveling Computational Templates.

IJCNN, : 1231-1236, 2007.
Authors: Tarja Knuuttila and Anna-Mari Rusanen and Timo Honkela
URL: http://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/conf/ijcnn/ijcnn2007.html#KnuuttilaRH07
Tags: computational templates
Abstract: In this article we approach neural networks as computational templates that travel across various sciences. Traditionally, it has been thought that models are primarily models of some target systems: they are assumed to represent partially or completely their target systems. We argue, instead, that many computational models cannot easily be conceived of in representational terms. Rather, they can be seen as models for various epistemic endeavors. Apart from dealing with the question of representation, we discuss also what implications the genuinely cross-disciplinary computational templates such as neural networks have for the organization of science. We use Self-organizing maps as an example through which we study the aforementioned questions.
| URL | BibTeX  
@inproceedings{conf/ijcnn/KnuuttilaRH07,
title = {Self-Organizing Maps as Traveling Computational Templates.},
author = {Tarja Knuuttila and Anna-Mari Rusanen and Timo Honkela},
booktitle = {IJCNN},
crossref = {conf/ijcnn/2007},
pages = {1231-1236},
publisher = {IEEE},
url = {http://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/conf/ijcnn/ijcnn2007.html#KnuuttilaRH07},
year = {2007},
abstract = {In this article we approach neural networks as computational templates that travel across various sciences. Traditionally, it has been thought that models are primarily models of some target systems: they are assumed to represent partially or completely their target systems. We argue, instead, that many computational models cannot easily be conceived of in representational terms. Rather, they can be seen as models for various epistemic endeavors. Apart from dealing with the question of representation, we discuss also what implications the genuinely cross-disciplinary computational templates such as neural networks have for the organization of science. We use Self-organizing maps as an example through which we study the aforementioned questions.},
date = {2008-04-21}, ee = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/IJCNN.2007.4371134},
keywords = {computational templates }
}