English

Making Meaning: Semiotics Within Predictive Knowledge Architectures

Artificial Intelligence 2019-04-22 v1 Machine Learning

Abstract

Within Reinforcement Learning, there is a fledgling approach to conceptualizing the environment in terms of predictions. Central to this predictive approach is the assertion that it is possible to construct ontologies in terms of predictions about sensation, behaviour, and time---to categorize the world into entities which express all aspects of the world using only predictions. This construction of ontologies is integral to predictive approaches to machine knowledge where objects are described exclusively in terms of how they are perceived. In this paper, we ground the Pericean model of semiotics in terms of Reinforcement Learning Methods, describing Peirce's Three Categories in the notation of General Value Functions. Using the Peircean model of semiotics, we demonstrate that predictions alone are insufficient to construct an ontology; however, we identify predictions as being integral to the meaning-making process. Moreover, we discuss how predictive knowledge provides a particularly stable foundation for semiosis\textemdash the process of making meaning\textemdash and suggest a possible avenue of research to design algorithmic methods which construct semantics and meaning using predictions.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1904.09023,
  title  = {Making Meaning: Semiotics Within Predictive Knowledge Architectures},
  author = {Alex Kearney and Oliver Oxton},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1904.09023},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

Accepted to RLDM 2019

R2 v1 2026-06-23T08:44:24.321Z