Associative search network: A reinforcement learning associative memory
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1149264
DOI10.1007/BF00453370zbMath0453.68055OpenAlexW2102673654MaRDI QIDQ1149264
Andrew G. Barto, Richard S. Sutton, Peter S. Brouwer
Publication date: 1981
Published in: Biological Cybernetics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00453370
Learning and adaptive systems in artificial intelligence (68T05) Pattern recognition, speech recognition (68T10)
Related Items
A comparison of adaptive critic and chemotaxis methods in adaptive control, Perspectives of approximate dynamic programming, Self-Organization in the Basal Ganglia with Modulation of Reinforcement Signals, Landmark learning: An illustration of associative search, Cerebral mechanism for reward-mediated learning: A mathematical model of neuropopulational network plasticity, Synthesis of nonlinear control surfaces by a layered associative search network, A tutorial survey of reinforcement learning, Empirical Dynamic Programming, Simple statistical gradient-following algorithms for connectionist reinforcement learning, Vibration control of a nonlinear quarter-car active suspension system by reinforcement learning, A Boolean complete neural model of adaptive behavior, Neural population modeling and psychology: a review, Linear function neurons: Structure and training
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Automaton theory and modelling of biological systems. Translated by Scitran (Scientific Translation Service)
- On optimal nonlinear associative recall
- Fast adaptive formation of orthogonalizing filters and associative memory in recurrent networks of neuron-like elements
- Adaptive pattern classification and universal recoding. II: Feedback, expectation, olfaction, illusions
- Neural theory of association and concept-formation
- Learning Automata - A Survey
- Punish/Reward: Learning with a Critic in Adaptive Threshold Systems
- A neuron model with learning capability and its relation to mechanisms of association