Comparing a Voting-Based Policy with Winner-Takes-All to Perform Action Selection in Motivational Agents

Author(s):  
Orlando Avila-García ◽  
Lola Cañamero
1999 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 692-693
Author(s):  
Daniel V. Meegan

Winner-takes-all (WTA) typically describes a mechanism for selecting the highest peak of activity in a sensory map that encodes independent representations of potential targets. To Findlay & Walker, WTA is an inherent property of a motor map that is incapable of representing multiple targets independently. Although the output of a WTA system should be characteristic of only one target, actions can be influenced by multiple targets.


2014 ◽  
Vol 24 (12) ◽  
pp. 1450156 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. D. Frank

A Lotka–Volterra model for an arbitrary number of competitors is studied for different ratios of self-inhibition versus cross-inhibition. It is shown that winner-takes-all fixed points (states of single surviving species) are the only stable fixed points of the model when cross-inhibition exceeds self-inhibition. Secondary bifurcations in terms of bifurcations between winner-takes-all fixed points induced by changes in the exponential growth rates of competitors are studied and the critical control parameters are identified. A selection principle is derived that states that evolution proceeds in such a way that exponential growth rates of surviving competitors are magnified in evolutionary bifurcation steps. The interacting competitor model is applied as an amplitude equation model for interacting patterns of self-organizing pattern formation systems with an eye on action selection and compulsive behaviors in humans. The possibility is discussed that human behavior is subjected to the selection principle of "faster growth rates".


2020 ◽  
Vol 49 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 36-43
Author(s):  
Justus Haucap

Während digitale Plattformen den Wettbewerb auf vielen Märkte intensiviert haben, besteht aufgrund des kippligen "Winner-takes-all"-Charakters dieser Märkte und der teils hohen Marktkonzentration auch ein erhöhtes Risiko einer Marktabschottung durch große Plattformen. Daher spricht einiges für neue wettbewerbspolitische Instrumente. Insbesondere Strategien, die Multi-Homing künstlich verhindern, sollten von Wettbewerbsbehörden noch vor der Entstehung einer Marktbeherrschung untersucht werden. Darüber hinaus sollte der Zugang zu Daten für Dritte grundsätzlich einfacher sein als bisher. In der Fusionskontrolle gibt es gute Gründe für eine Intensivierung mit Blick auf sogenannte "Killerakquisitionen". Allerdings muss eine Balance gefunden werden, um Innovations- und Gründungsanreize zu erhalten. Die aktuelle GWB-Novelle nimmt viele dieser Erkenntnisse aus der wettbewerbsökonomischen Forschung auf.


Author(s):  
Lidia K Simanjuntak ◽  
Tessa Y M Sihite ◽  
Mesran Mesran ◽  
Nuning Kurniasih ◽  
Yuhandri Yuhandri

All colleges each year organize the selection of new admissions. Acceptance of prospective students in universities as education providers is done by selecting prospective students based on achievement in school and college entrance selection. To select the best student candidates based on predetermined criteria, then use Multi-Criteria Decision Making (MCDM) or commonly called decision support system. One method in MCDM is the Elimination Et Choix Traduisant la Reality (ELECTRE). The ELECTRE method is the best method of action selection. The ELECTRE method to obtain the best alternative by eliminating alternative that do not fit the criteria and can be applied to the decision SNMPTN invitation path.


Author(s):  
Bernhard Hommel

AbstractCommonsense and theorizing about action control agree in assuming that human behavior is (mainly) driven by goals, but no mechanistic theory of what goals are, where they come from, and how they impact action selection is available. Here I develop such a theory that is based on the assumption that GOALs guide Intentional Actions THrough criteria (GOALIATH). The theory is intended to be minimalist and parsimonious with respect to its assumptions, as transparent and mechanistic as possible, and it is based on representational assumptions provided by the Theory of Event Coding (TEC). It holds that goal-directed behavior is guided by selection criteria that activate and create competition between event files that contain action-effect codes matching one or more of the criteria—a competition that eventually settles into a solution favoring the best-matching event file. The criteria are associated with various sources, including biological drives, acquired needs (e.g., of achievement, power, or affiliation), and short-term, sometimes arbitrary, instructed aims. Action selection is, thus, a compromise that tries to satisfy various criteria related to different driving forces, which are also likely to vary in strength over time. Hence, what looks like goal-directed action emerges from, and represents an attempt to satisfy multiple constraints with different origins, purposes, operational characteristics, and timescales—which among other things does not guarantee a high degree of coherence or rationality of the eventual outcome. GOALIATH calls for a radical break with conventional theorizing about the control of goal-directed behavior, as it among other things questions existing cognitive-control theories and dual-route models of action control.


Author(s):  
Boucher Aurélien ◽  
Li Yuqing ◽  
Shao Xueyun

This article investigates the earnings of Chinese golf trainers. Through a combination of ethnographic observations, interviews and a quantitative survey analysis, it depicts the social structure of the economy of golf training in China, showing that golf trainers’ playing abilities and fame, rather than any certificate of competence (e.g. diploma or professional certification), determine their earnings. At the same time, we underline many common characteristics between the artists’ labour market and the golf trainers’ labour market, such as the importance of fame and a winner-takes-all logic.


2008 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 286-295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lewis Pettit ◽  
Jennifer Charles ◽  
Andrew D. Wilson ◽  
Mandy S. Plumb ◽  
Anne Brockman ◽  
...  

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