Qualitative Representations: How People Reason and Learn about the Continuous World

Kenneth D. Forbus
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Qualitative Representations: How People Reason and Learn about the Continuous World

Kenneth D. Forbus
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Found in: Reference, COMPUTERS GENERAL

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Overview

440 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Oct 28, 2025
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 440
  • Publisher: Mit Press
  • ISBN: 9780262055765
  • Dimensions: 6.0" W x 1.0" L x 9.0" H
Kenneth D. Forbus is Walter P. Murphy Professor of Computer Science and Professor of Education at Northwestern University. He is the coauthor of Building Problem Solvers and the coeditor of Smart Machines in Education, both published by the MIT Press.

"It is three and a half decades since the landmark special issue of the journal Artificial Intelligence on qualitative reasoning, so it is certainly time to review what progress has been made since those auspicious beginnings. In this book, Ken Forbus reviews the origins of the field of qualitative reasoning and charts the progress since then, concentrating on his own work, but also including key related research of others. A constant thread is the relevance of qualitative reasoning to cognitive science, and how it has been influenced by cognitive science, for example in the chapters on analogical reasoning. I particularly welcome the attention given to qualitative spatial reasoning. For anyone interested in the field of qualitative reasoning, its relationship to cognitive science, sketch understanding, analogy, common sense, and expert reasoning, this book provides an excellent introduction, and many pointers to other work in the literature to explore."

-Anthony G. Cohn, Professor of Automated Reasoning, School of Computing, University of Leeds, UK

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