Abstract

There has been numerous works around cognitive architectures recently. Nevertheless, since no cognitive architecture is truly finished because of the limitations of brain studies, the activities that a cognitive architecture can perform is not well delimited. On the other hand, we argue that cognition is not a system’s characteristic but rather, a relationship between a system and its environment. In this article, we propose a task that a hypothetical finished cognitive architecture must be able to solve. Then, the performance that this hypothetical cognitive architecture achieves is evaluated. Our main goals with this are (1) to evaluate the viability of using cognitive architectures to solve these kind of tasks, and (2) to find good ways to present information to systems that work as humans.

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