Differentiating robotic behavior and artificial intelligence from animal behavior and biological intelligence: Testing structural accuracy

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (6):1070-1071 (2001)
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Abstract

We emphasize the feature of Webb's presentation that bears most directly on contemporary research with real animals. Many neuroscience modelers erroneously conclude that a model that performs like an animal must have achieved this goal through processes analogous with those used by the animal. A simulation failure justifies rejecting a model, but success does not justify acceptance. However, an important benefit of models, successful or otherwise, is to stimulate new research.

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