Results for 'Srinivasan Parthasarathy'

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  1.  8
    A Formalism for Action Representation Inspired by Mīmāṁsā.Ranjani Parthasarathi & Bama Srinivasan - 2012 - Journal of Intelligent Systems 21 (1):45-77.
    . This paper endeavors to formalize imperatives that convey actions. Imperatives, unlike propositions, do not hold the value of true or false. Peter Vranas proposed an alternate logical formalism in the literature of imperative logic with three values, namely: Satisfaction (), Violation () and Avoidance (). Although this formalism takes into account the conditional imperatives, it does not address imperatives from the perspective of actions. According to Mīmāṁsā, the prime motive of an imperative is to carry out action so as (...)
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  2.  27
    A Formalism to Specify Unambiguous Instructions Inspired by Mīmāṁsā in Computational Settings.Bama Srinivasan & Ranjani Parthasarathi - 2022 - Logica Universalis 16 (1):27-55.
    Mīmāṁsā, an Indian hermeneutics provides an exhaustive methodology to interpret Vedic statements. A formalism namely, Mīmāṁsā Inspired Representation of Actions has already been proposed in a preliminary manner. This paper expands the formalism logically and includes Syntax and Semantics covering Soundness and Completeness. Here, several interpretation techniques from Mīmāṁsā have been considered for formalising the statements. Based on these, instructions that denote actions are categorized into positive and prohibitive unconditional imperatives and conditional imperatives that enjoin reason, temporal action and goal. (...)
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  3.  5
    An intelligent task analysis approach for special education based on MIRA.Bama Srinivasan & Ranjani Parthasarathi - 2013 - Journal of Applied Logic 11 (1):137-145.
  4.  17
    Business Data Ethics: Emerging Models for Governing AI and Advanced Analytics.Dennis Hirsch, Timothy Bartley, Aravind Chandrasekaran, Davon Norris, Srinivasan Parthasarathy & Piers Norris Turner - 2023 - Springer.
    This open access book explains how leading business organizations attempt to achieve the responsible and ethical use of artificial intelligence (AI) and other advanced information technologies. These technologies can produce tremendous insights and benefits. But they can also invade privacy, perpetuate bias, and otherwise injure people and society. To use these technologies successfully, organizations need to implement them responsibly and ethically. The question is: how to do this? Data ethics management, and this book, provide some answers. -/- The authors interviewed (...)
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  5.  18
    Knowledge Gaps: A Challenge for Agent‐Based Automatic Task Completion.Goonmeet Bajaj, Sean Current, Daniel Schmidt, Bortik Bandyopadhyay, Christopher W. Myers & Srinivasan Parthasarathy - 2022 - Topics in Cognitive Science 14 (4):780-799.
    The study of human cognition and the study of artificial intelligence (AI) have a symbiotic relationship, with advancements in one field often informing or creating new work in the other. Human cognition has many capabilities modern AI systems cannot compete with. One such capability is the detection, identification, and resolution of knowledge gaps (KGs). Using these capabilities as inspiration, we examine how to incorporate detection, identification, and resolution of KGs in artificial agents. We present a paradigm that enables research on (...)
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  6.  9
    Knowledge Gaps: A Challenge for Agent‐Based Automatic Task Completion.Goonmeet Bajaj, Sean Current, Daniel Schmidt, Bortik Bandyopadhyay, Christopher W. Myers & Srinivasan Parthasarathy - 2022 - Topics in Cognitive Science 14 (4):780-799.
    The study of human cognition and the study of artificial intelligence (AI) have a symbiotic relationship, with advancements in one field often informing or creating new work in the other. Human cognition has many capabilities modern AI systems cannot compete with. One such capability is the detection, identification, and resolution of knowledge gaps (KGs). Using these capabilities as inspiration, we examine how to incorporate detection, identification, and resolution of KGs in artificial agents. We present a paradigm that enables research on (...)
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  7. The Aptness of Anger.Amia Srinivasan - 2018 - Journal of Political Philosophy 26 (2):123-144.
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  8. Ethics in science and technology : exploring a select perspective.Parthasarathi Banerjee - 2010 - In Ananda Das Gupta (ed.), Ethics, business and society: managing responsibly. Los Angeles: Response Books.
     
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  9. Interlocutions with Social Studies and Society as the Object of Inquiry: Language of Traditional Pundits in Nineteenth Century Bengal.Parthasarathi Banerjee - 2007 - In Sabyasachi Bhattacharya (ed.), Development of Modern Indian Thought and the Social Sciences. Oxford University Press. pp. 10--69.
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  10.  6
    A Unique Indexing Technique for Discourse Structures.Parthasarathi Ranjani & Chinnaudayar Navaneethakrishnan Subalalitha - 2014 - Journal of Intelligent Systems 23 (3):231-243.
    Sutra is a form of text representation that has been used in both Tamil and Sanskrit literature to convey information in a short and crisp manner. Nanool, an ancient Tamil grammar masterpiece has used sutras for defining grammar rules. Similarly, in Sanskrit literature, many of the Shāstrās have used sutras for a concise representation of their content. Sutras are defined as short aphorisms, formulae-like structures that convey the complete essence of the text. They act as indices to the elaborate content (...)
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  11. Genealogy, Epistemology and Worldmaking.Amia Srinivasan - 2019 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 119 (2):127-156.
    We suffer from genealogical anxiety when we worry that the contingent origins of our representations, once revealed, will somehow undermine or cast doubt on those representations. Is such anxiety ever rational? Many have apparently thought so, from pre-Socratic critics of Greek theology to contemporary evolutionary debunkers of morality. One strategy for vindicating critical genealogies is to see them as undermining the epistemic standing of our representations—the justification of our beliefs, the aptness of our concepts, and so on. I argue that (...)
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  12.  16
    Governance Lessons for CRISPR/Cas9 from the Missed Opportunities of Asilomar.Shobita Parthasarathy - 2015 - Ethics in Biology, Engineering and Medicine 6 (3-4):305-312.
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  13.  30
    Only irrelevant sad but not happy faces are inhibited under high perceptual load.Rashmi Gupta & Narayanan Srinivasan - 2015 - Cognition and Emotion 29 (4):747-754.
    Perceptual load plays a critical role in identification and awareness of stimuli. Given the differences in emotion–attention interactions, we investigated the perception of distractor emotional faces in two different load conditions under divided attention with a task based on the inattentional blindness paradigm. Participants performed a low- or high-load task with a string of letters presented against a happy, sad or neutral face (in a circular form) as the background. Participants were asked to identify the face that appeared in the (...)
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  14. The Archimedean Urge.Amia Srinivasan - 2015 - Philosophical Perspectives 29 (1):325-362.
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  15.  8
    Regulating Risk: Defining Genetic Privacy in the United States and Britain.Shobita Parthasarathy - 2004 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 29 (3):332-352.
    The availability of new genetic testing technologies to identify individuals as at risk for a particular disease has inspired tremendous concern that individuals with gene mutations will soon be universally identified, for both insurance and employment purposes, as a genetic underclass. Scholarship in science and technology studies, however, suggests that understandings of genetic knowledge might be locally contingent, while research in comparative politics helps us understand how national context might play an important role in framing approaches to the regulation of (...)
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  16.  17
    Imagining Organizational Transformation through Linguistic Suggestion.Parthasarathi Banerjee - 2003 - Journal of Human Values 9 (1):3-18.
    Organization emerges as reality only through language. Transformation is such an emergence and it must get over the present context. A descriptive or implicative language fails to transcend the context. Linguistic suggestion of imageries and linguistic communion through imagination take departure from the present context and emerge as the new pleasurable transformed reality of organization. Linguistic holds the key to organizational transformation.
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  17.  23
    Science and Polity in the Writings of Swami Vivekananda.Parthasarathi Banerjee - 2007 - Journal of Human Values 13 (2):135-150.
    This article questions the reading of Vivekananda. By drawing several fine lines of separations between a text and an utterance, we argue that Vivekananda spoke. Such separations have been drawn on three major aspects of locating a text as consciousness, as intention or as transmitted. Indeed, Vivekananda spoke as performance, and as knowledge has intimate relation with performance, this article draws major conclusions relating to science as from speaking. Much of science could be otherwise considered as myth and apprehending Vivekananda (...)
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  18. Radical Externalism.Amia Srinivasan - 2020 - Philosophical Review 129 (3):395-431.
    This article presents a novel challenge to epistemic internalism. The challenge rests on a set of cases which feature subjects forming beliefs under conditions of “bad ideology”—that is, conditions in which pervasively false beliefs have the function of sustaining, and are sustained by, systems of social oppression. In such cases, the article suggests, the externalistic view that justification is in part a matter of worldly relations, rather than the internalistic view that justification is solely a matter of how things stand (...)
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  19.  62
    Aesthetics of navigational performance in hypertext.Parthasarathi Banerjee - 2004 - AI and Society 18 (4):297-309.
    A hypertext learner navigates with a instinctive feeling for a knowledge. The learner does not know her queries, although she has a feeling for them. A learner’s navigation appears as complete upon the emergence of an aesthetic pleasure, called rasa. The order of arrival or the associational logic and even the temporal order are not relevant to this emergence. The completeness of aesthetics is important. The learner does not look for the intention of the writer, neither does she look for (...)
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  20.  49
    A sketch of blissful actions and democracy based upon rasa.Parthasarathi Banerjee - 2007 - AI and Society 21 (1-2):93-120.
    Contemporary democracy has given primacy to thought. Building up institutions on thought and reasoned discourse excludes out human actions derived not from thought that one thinks. Ordinary life is visited by emotion and passion. Such actions of unknown origin are captured best in the drama. Indian theory and practice of drama and the poetics offer communion between the performer and the viewer. Blissful relish of the actions and the dialogues lift up the banal actions from the ordinary to a state (...)
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  21.  62
    Guest Editorial.Parthasarathi Banerjee - 2007 - AI and Society 21 (1-2):1-4.
  22.  26
    The long and the short of it: On the nature and origin of functional overlap between representations of space and time.Mahesh Srinivasan & Susan Carey - 2010 - Cognition 116 (2):217-241.
  23.  5
    Vedanta treatise.Avula Parthasarathy - 1984 - Bombay, India: Vedanta Life Institute.
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  24.  23
    The role of empathy for artificial intelligence accountability.Ramya Srinivasan & Beatriz San Miguel González - 2022 - Journal of Responsible Technology 9 (C):100021.
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  25.  17
    The role of empathy for artificial intelligence accountability.Ramya Srinivasan & Beatriz San Miguel González - 2022 - Journal of Responsible Technology 9 (C):100021.
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  26. Disagreement Without Transparency: Some Bleak Thoughts.John Hawthorne & Amia Srinivasan - 2013 - In David Phiroze Christensen & Jennifer Lackey (eds.), The Epistemology of Disagreement: New Essays. Oxford University Press. pp. 9--30.
    What ought one to do, epistemically speaking, when faced with a disagreement? Faced with this question, one naturally hopes for an answer that is principled, general, and intuitively satisfying. We want to argue that this is a vain hope. Our claim is that a satisfying answer will prove elusive because of non-transparency: that there is no condition such that we are always in a position to know whether it obtains. When we take seriously that there is nothing, including our own (...)
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  27.  19
    -BiPd: a clean noncentrosymmetric superconductor.Ramakrishnan Srinivasan, Joshi Bhanu & A. Thamizhavel - 2017 - Philosophical Magazine 97 (36):3460-3476.
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  28. Normativity without Cartesian privilege.Amia Srinivasan - 2015 - Philosophical Issues 25 (1):273-299.
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  29. Consciousness differentiated and integrated.Giulio Srinivasan Tononi - 2003 - In Axel Cleeremans (ed.), The Unity of Consciousness: Binding, Integration, and Dissociation. Oxford University Press.
  30.  24
    Multi-scale control influences sense of agency: Investigating intentional binding using event-control approach.Devpriya Kumar & Narayanan Srinivasan - 2017 - Consciousness and Cognition 49:1-14.
  31.  52
    The Poor as Suppliers of Intellectual Property: A Social Network Approach to Sustainable Poverty Alleviation.Sridevi Shivarajan & Aravind Srinivasan - 2013 - Business Ethics Quarterly 23 (3):381-406.
    ABSTRACT:We extend the Base of the Pyramid (BoP) poverty-alleviation approach by recognizing the poor as valuable suppliers—specifically of intellectual property. Although the poor possess huge reserves of intellectual property, they are unable to participate in global knowledge networks owing to their illiteracy and poverty. This is a crippling form of social exclusion in today’s growing knowledge economy because it adversely affects their capabilities for advancement at several levels. Providing the poor access to global knowledge networks as rightful participants—as suppliers of (...)
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  32. A theoretical basis for standing and traveling brain waves measured with human EEG with implications for an integrated consciousness.Paul L. Nunez & Ramesh Srinivasan - 2006 - Clinical Neurophysiology 117 (11):2424-2435.
  33. Are We Luminous?Amia Srinivasan - 2013 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 90 (2):294-319.
    Since its appearance over a decade ago, Timothy Williamson's anti-luminosity argument has come under sustained attack. Defenders of the luminous overwhelmingly object to the argument's use of a certain margin-for-error premise. Williamson himself claims that the premise follows easily from a safety condition on knowledge together with his description of the thought experiment. But luminists argue that this is not so: the margin-for-error premise either requires an implausible interpretation of the safety requirement on knowledge, or it requires other equally implausible (...)
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  34. Atma bodha (Knowledge of the self) of Sri Sankaracharya.Avula Parthasarathy - 1971 - Bombay,: Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan. Edited by Śaṅkarācārya.
     
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  35. A Dworkinian reading of the Indian Constitution.Suhrith Parthasarathy - 2018 - In Salman Khurshid, Lokendra Malik & Veronica Rodriguez-Blanco (eds.), Dignity in the legal and political philosophy of Ronald Dworkin. New Delhi, India: Oxford University Press.
     
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  36. Non-Alignment," Self Reliance".Ashok Parthasarathi - 1993 - In Yash Pal, Ashok Jain & Subodh Mahanti (eds.), Science in Society: Some Perspectives. Gyan Pub. House in Collaboration with National Institute of Science, Technology, and Development Studies. pp. 343.
     
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  37.  55
    Tradition and the indian writer.R. Parthasarathy - 1992 - British Journal of Aesthetics 32 (2):134-148.
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  38.  6
    Tradition And The Indian Writer.R. Parthasarathy - 1991 - British Journal of Aesthetics 31 (4):134-148.
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  39. .Amia Srinivasan - 2021
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  40.  10
    Impact of gender on attitude toward student-to-student local anesthesia administration.Navaneetha Cugati, Ramesh Kumaresan & Balamanikanda Srinivasan - 2014 - Journal of Education and Ethics in Dentistry 4 (1):32.
  41.  17
    The Cilappatikāram of Iḷaṅkō Aṭikạl, An Epic of South IndiaThe Cilappatikaram of Ilanko Atikal, An Epic of South India.Hank Heifetz & R. Parthasarathy - 1999 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 (1):193.
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  42.  36
    Natural solutions to the problem of functional integration.Christian G. Habeck & Ramesh Srinivasan - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (3):402-403.
    Current EEG research emphasizes gamma band coherence as a signature of functional integration, that is, the solution to the binding problem. We note that spatial patterns of coherent neural activity are also observed at other EEG frequencies. If these oscillations reflect Nunez's resonant modes, they offer a solution to the binding problem that emerges naturally from the architecture of cortical connections.
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  43.  29
    The Role of Design and Training in Artifact Expertise: The Case of the Abacus and Visual Attention.Mahesh Srinivasan, Katie Wagner, Michael C. Frank & David Barner - 2018 - Cognitive Science 42 (S3):757-782.
    Previous accounts of how people develop expertise have focused on how deliberate practice transforms the cognitive and perceptual representations and processes that give rise to expertise. However, the likelihood of developing expertise with a particular tool may also depend on the degree to which that tool fits pre‐existing perceptual and cognitive abilities. The present studies explored whether the abacus—a descendent of the first human computing devices—may have evolved to exploit general biases in human visual attention, or whether developing expertise with (...)
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  44.  32
    Proactive and reactive control depends on emotional valence: a Stroop study with emotional expressions and words.Bhoomika Rastogi Kar, Narayanan Srinivasan, Yagyima Nehabala & Richa Nigam - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 32 (2):325-340.
    We examined proactive and reactive control effects in the context of task-relevant happy, sad, and angry facial expressions on a face-word Stroop task. Participants identified the emotion expressed by a face that contained a congruent or incongruent emotional word. Proactive control effects were measured in terms of the reduction in Stroop interference as a function of previous trial emotion and previous trial congruence. Reactive control effects were measured in terms of the reduction in Stroop interference as a function of current (...)
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  45. The Ineffable and the Ethical.Amia Srinivasan - 2018 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 96 (1):215-223.
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  46.  11
    The Self-Organization of a Spoken Word.John G. Holden & Srinivasan Rajaraman - 2012 - Frontiers in Psychology 3.
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  47.  36
    The Amelia Bedelia effect: World knowledge and the goal bias in language acquisition.Mahesh Srinivasan & David Barner - 2013 - Cognition 128 (3):431-450.
  48.  30
    Why is Semantic Change Asymmetric? The Role of Concreteness and Word Frequency and Metaphor and Metonymy.Bodo Winter & Mahesh Srinivasan - 2022 - Metaphor and Symbol 37 (1):39-54.
    Metaphors and other tropes are commonly thought to reflect asymmetries in concreteness, with concrete sources being used to talk about relatively more abstract targets. Similarly, originating sense...
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  49.  32
    Many Heads, Arms and Eyes: Origin, Meaning and Form of Multiplicity in Indian Art.Robert L. Brown & Doris Meth Srinivasan - 2001 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 121 (2):279.
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  50. Atypical object exploration in infants at-risk for autism during the first year of lifer.Maninderjit Kaur, Sudha M. Srinivasan & Anjana N. Bhat - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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