Results for 'autonomous learners'

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  1.  13
    Autonomous Learners and the Learning Society: systematic perspectives on the practice of teaching in Higher Education.Connie Marsh, Kelvyn Richards & Paul Smith - 2001 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 33 (3-4):381-395.
    (2001). Autonomous Learners and the Learning Society: systematic perspectives on the practice of teaching in Higher Education. Educational Philosophy and Theory: Vol. 33, No. 3-4, pp. 381-395.
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  2.  8
    Autonomous Learners and the Learning Society: systematic perspectives on the practice of teaching in Higher Education.Kelvyn Richards Marsh - 2001 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 33 (3-4):381-395.
  3.  16
    Building autonomous learners: perspectives from research and practice using self-determination theory.Stephen Earl - 2019 - British Journal of Educational Studies 67 (2):269-271.
  4.  11
    Exploring Gameful Motivation of Autonomous Learners.Jukka Vahlo, Kai Tuuri & Tanja Välisalo - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    In this explorative study, we investigated motives of autonomous learners to participate in an online course, and how these motives are related to gameplay motivations, engagement in the course experience, and learning outcomes. The guiding premise for the study has been the idea that learning and game playing carry phenomenal similarities that could be revealed by scrutinizing motives for participating in a massive open online course that does not involve any intentionally game-like features. The research was conducted by (...)
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  5.  14
    Redesigning instruction to create autonomous learners and thinkers.John Arul Phillips - 1997 - In David Bridges (ed.), Education, autonomy, and democratic citizenship: philosophy in a changing world. New York: Routledge. pp. 261.
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  6.  26
    Mobilizing Foucault: history, subjectivity and autonomous learners in nurse education.Chris Darbyshire & Valerie E. M. Fleming - 2008 - Nursing Inquiry 15 (4):263-269.
    In the past 20, years the impact of progressive educational theories have become influential in nurse education particularly in relation to partnership and empowerment between lecturers and students and the development of student autonomy. The introduction of these progressive theories was in response to the criticisms that nurse education was characterized by hierarchical and asymmetrical power relationships between lecturers and students that encouraged rote learning and stifled student autonomy. This article explores how the work of Michel Foucault can be mobilized (...)
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  7.  35
    Evidence and metacognition in the new regime of truth: Figures of the autonomous learner on the walls of Plato's cave.John Issitt - 2007 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 41 (3):381–393.
    This article traces three features of contemporary educational thought that at first sight appear to be quite different and distinct, but are, it is argued, linked in a discursive formation that constitutes a regime of truth in educational thinking and policy. Using Foucauldian categories, it argues that a discursive formation connects the identity of the ‘autonomous learner’ with the ‘evidence-based’ movement, via the powerful scientific discourse of cognitive psychology—in particular through the notion of ‘metacognition’. Despite the rhetoric of personal (...)
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  8.  23
    Toward a coherent critical theory of learner autonomy in language learning: Exploring its political implications in higher education and limitations in the literature.Santiago Betancor-Falcon - 2023 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (13):1550-1561.
    The literature on autonomous language learning reveals both, scholars’ great enthusiasm for the revolutionary potential of learner autonomy as well as pessimism for its continual depoliticization within higher education. Similar to how ‘learner autonomy’ is still today an unfinished construct that raises considerable confusion among scholars, the critical theory of learner autonomy in the field of language learning remains largely unexplored; and thus, yet to be fully articulated. Building on the relevant literature, this article attempts to provide a coherent (...)
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  9.  10
    Affective Cognition of Students’ Autonomous Learning in College English Teaching Based on Deep Learning.Dian Zhang - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Emotions can influence and regulate learners’ attention, memory, thinking, and other cognitive activities. The similarities and differences between English and non-English majors in terms of English classroom learning engagement were compared, and the significant factors affecting the emotional, cognitive, and behavioral engagement of the two groups of students in the English classroom were different. English majors’ affective engagement in the classroom was not significant, which was largely related to their time and frequency of English learning. Traditional methods of learner (...)
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  10.  6
    Executing Learning Activities and Autonomy-Supportive Instructions Enhance Autonomous Motivation.Paul Hinnersmann, Katrin Hoier & Stephan Dutke - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    This study investigated situational changes in learners’ degree of autonomous regulation during other-initiated learning activities and examined the influence of the instructional style on such changes. To this end, relative autonomous motivation of 172 fifth to seventh grade students was measured before, during and after execution of a musical learning activity. It was experimentally manipulated whether students were instructed in an autonomy-supportive or a controlling style. As expected based on self-determination theory and the action-based model of cognitive (...)
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  11.  29
    Institutional pedagogy for an autonomous society: Castoriadis & Lapassade.Sophie Wustefeld - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (10):936-946.
    This article explores how George Lapassade’s institutional pedagogy meets the definition of ‘praxis’ formulated by Cornelius Castoriadis, as the activity creating reflective and deliberative subjects. Lapassade applies Castoriadis’s criticism of bureaucracy to transform the teacher-learners’ relationship and emphasises how self-governance group dynamics among learners facilitates learning in general and access to critical thinking in particular. Castoriadis’s concept of democracy as individual and collective autonomy demands an interpretation of equality as a dynamic process instead of as a state of (...)
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  12. Beyond simple rule extraction: The extraction of planning knowledge from reinforcement learners.Ron Sun - unknown
    Abstra,ct— This paper will discuss learning in hybrid models that goes beyond simple rule extraction from backpropagation networks. Although simple rule extraction has received a lot of research attention, to further develop hybrid learning models that include both symbolic and subsymbolic knowledge and that learn autonomously, it is necessary to study autonomous learning of both subsymbolic and symbolic knowledge in integrated architectures. This paper will describe knowledge extraction from neural reinforcement learning. It includes two approaches towards extracting plan knowledge: (...)
     
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  13.  68
    The unexamined student is not worth teaching: preparation, the zone of proximal development, and the Socratic Model of Scaffolded Learning.Robert Colter & Joseph Ulatowski - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (14):1367-1380.
    ‘Scaffolded learning’ describes a cluster of instructional techniques designed to move students from a novice position toward greater understanding, such that they become independent learners. Our Socratic Model of Scaffolded Learning includes two phases not normally included in discussions of scaffolded learning, the preparatory and problematizing phases. Our article will illuminate this blind spot by arguing that these crucial preliminary elements ought to be considered an integral part of a scaffolding model. If instructors are cognizant of the starting position (...)
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  14.  10
    Exploring the Social Context of Self-directed Learning in the Contemporary Workplace.Veronika Hrabalová & Kamila Urban - 2024 - Human Affairs 34 (2):295-310.
    The evolving landscape of workforce learning underscores the increasing importance of self-directed learning (SDL) within business organizations. SDL shifts the learning responsibility to learners themselves, requiring self-control, self-management, and autonomous motivation. Despite its numerous benefits for both business organizations and workers, it is challenged by the varying degrees of workers’ individual self-direction. This literature review aims to articulate the significance of social context – the support from leaders and peers – in facilitating workers’ SDL. It highlights leader autonomy (...)
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  15.  6
    Optimization of Flipped Classroom Teaching Model Based on Social Cognitive Network.Xinyue Wang - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-12.
    This article evaluates learners’ thinking in the complex environment of teaching level and cognitive construct process and examines learners within the framework of cognitive factors, as well as the degree of consistency in the training process, in the social practice as the teaching of teachers and students to provide timely and dynamic feedback, first of all to “evidence centered” education evaluation of design patterns and cognitive framework theory as the theoretical basis. An evaluation model based on learners (...)
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  16.  48
    The embodiment of learning.Jim Horn & Denise Wilburn - 2005 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 37 (5):745–760.
    This paper offers an introduction to the philosophy and science of embodied learning, conceived as both the stabilizing and expansionary process that sustains order and novelty within learners’ worlds enacted through observing and describing. Embodied learning acknowledges stability and change as the purposeful conjoined characteristics that sustain learners. It is, in many respects, a composite theory that represents work from various disciplines. This ‘naturalized epistemology’ conceives a world of fact inevitably imbued with the values that our own structural (...)
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  17.  6
    The Embodiment of Learning.Denise Wilburn Jim Horn - 2005 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 37 (5):745-760.
    This paper offers an introduction to the philosophy and science of embodied learning, conceived as both the stabilizing and expansionary process that sustains order and novelty within learners’ worlds enacted through observing and describing. Embodied learning acknowledges stability and change as the purposeful conjoined characteristics that sustain learners. It is, in many respects, a composite theory that represents work from various disciplines. This ‘naturalized epistemology’ ( ) conceives a world of fact inevitably imbued with the values that our (...)
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  18.  35
    Living and learning.John Pickering - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (6):1074-1074.
    To be plausible, biorobots will need to build themselves. Such autopoietic systems will be autonomous, active learners whose functional architecture is a joint product of factors supplied by the designer and factors learned from encountering an environment. Creating such biorobots will require appropriate theories of cognition, learning, and evolution, all of which are available.
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  19.  7
    The Impact of COVID-19 Home Confinement on Mexican University Students: Emotions, Coping Strategies, and Self-Regulated Learning.Martha Leticia Gaeta, Laura Gaeta & María del Socorro Rodriguez - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    One of the main challenges in higher education is promoting students' autonomous and self-regulated learning, which involves managing their own emotions and learning processes in different contexts and circumstances. Considering that online learning during the COVID-19 pandemic may be an opportunity for university students to take greater responsibility for their learning, it is essential to explore the strategies they have developed in the face of emotional and learning challenges during the health crisis. This study aimed at analyzing the relationships (...)
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  20.  35
    Educational Leadership Reconsidered: Arendt, Agamben, and Bauman.Mar Rosàs Tosas - 2015 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 35 (4):353-369.
    In this paper we claim educational leadership as an autonomous discipline whose goals and strategies should not mirror those typical of business and political leadership. In order to define the aims proper to educational leadership we question three common assumptions of what it is supposed to carry out. First, we turn to Hannah Arendt and her contemporary critics to maintain that education aims at opening up exceptions within the normal course of events rather than simply preserving it. This way, (...)
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  21.  5
    Extending repair in peer interaction: A conversation analytic study.Mia Huimin Chen & Shelly Xueting Ye - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:926842.
    Peer interaction constitutes a focal site for understanding learning orientations and autonomous learning behaviors. Based on 10 h of video-recorded data collected from small-size conversation-for-learning classes, this study, through the lens of Conversation Analysis, analyzes instances in which L2 learners spontaneously exploit learning opportunities from the on-task public talk and make them relevant for private learning in sequential private peer interaction. The analysis of extended negation-for-meaning practices in peer interaction displays how L2 learners orient to public repair (...)
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  22.  8
    A study of the impacts of motivational regulation and self-regulated second-language writing strategies on college students’ proximal and distal writing enjoyment and anxiety.Yining Zhang & Lianqi Dong - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Motivational regulation is crucial to explaining autonomous self-regulated learning, yet has received relatively little empirical attention. This study therefore examined how 230 college students’ motivational-regulation strategies affected their proximal and distal second-language writing-achievement emotions, and sought evidence of interactive effects of such strategies and self-regulated learning strategies on each of these two types of emotions. All the studied types of motivational-regulation strategy were found to directly predict both proximal and distal writing enjoyment, under a “the more the happier” principle, (...)
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  23.  5
    Exploring Students' Perception Concerning Educational Coaching: Premises for the Design and Implementation of an Online Coaching Platform in Academia.Gabriel Gorghiu, Mihai Bîzoi & Elena-Ancuţa Santi - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (4):142-157.
    Education is a field that evolves constantly in relation to the changes in the society and the needs of its beneficiaries, taking over and adapting functional models from other fields. The quality of education of today’s generations has a direct impact on the future, as tomorrow's adults need to have strong key competences, but also transversal competences needed in a dynamic and competitive labour market. Thus, the knowledge society implies opening up the education system to other social sectors, exploiting the (...)
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  24.  6
    Curriculum, Pedagogy and Educational Research: The Work of Lawrence Stenhouse.John Elliott & Nigel Norris (eds.) - 2012 - New York: Routledge.
    Lawrence Stenhouse was one of the most distinguished, original and influential educationalists of his generation. His theories about curriculum, curriculum development, pedagogy, teacher research, and research as a basis for teaching remain compelling and fresh and continue to be a counterpoint to instrumental and technocratic thinking in education. In this book, renowned educationalists describe Stenhouseâe(tm)s contribution to education, explore the contemporary relevance of his thinking and bring his work and legacy to the attention of a wide range of students, teachers, (...)
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  25.  36
    Learning: An evolutionary analysis.Joanna Swann - 2009 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 41 (3):256-269.
    This paper draws on the philosophy of Karl Popper to present a descriptive evolutionary epistemology that offers philosophical solutions to the following related problems: ‘What happens when learning takes place?’ and ‘What happens in human learning?’ It provides a detailed analysis of how learning takes place without any direct transfer of information from the environment to the learner, and it significantly extends the author's earlier published work on this topic. She proposes that learning should be construed as a special case (...)
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  26.  5
    Enabling Self-Directed Academic and Personal Wellbeing Through Cognitive Education.Gideon P. Van Tonder, Magdalena M. Kloppers & Mary M. Grosser - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    BackgroundThe international crisis of declining learner wellbeing exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic with its devastating effects on physical health and wellbeing, impels the prioritization of initiatives for specifically enabling academic and personal wellbeing among school learners to ensure autonomous functioning and flourishing in academic and daily life. Research emphasizes the role of self-directed action in fostering wellbeing. However, there is limited research evidence of how self-directed action among school learners could be advanced.AimWe explore the effectiveness of an (...)
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  27.  23
    Using students' motivational and learning profiles in investigating their perceptions and achievement in case-based and lecture-based learning environments.Marlies Baeten, Filip Dochy & Katrien Struyven - 2012 - Educational Studies 38 (5):491-506.
    A teaching method may not work for all students. Therefore, attention should be paid to the type of students entering the learning environment in order to explain how they perceive the learning environment and achieve. This study investigates students? perceptions and achievement in four learning environments that differed in the degree to which case-based and lecture-based learning were implemented (either separately or combined), hereby making use of students? motivational and learning profiles. Participants were 1098 first-year student teachers who took a (...)
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  28.  7
    Subject-Object of the Educational Process in the Realities of Contemporaneity, or IP Aliases → ∞.Tigran Marinosyan - 2018 - Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences 6:7-30.
    The educational doctrine of The Great Didactic as one of the “grand narratives” suffered its complete setback as a result of events that took place in Paris in 1968. Students stopped believing in the correctness of the entrenched education system with its goals and ideals, and from the inside they “blew up” the “walls” of universities, which continued to follow the traditional teaching methods and content of the learning process. According to the author of this study, the ideological explosion inside (...)
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  29.  85
    Beyond Useful Knowledge: Developing the Subjective Self.Colin Wringe - 2015 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 49 (1):32-44.
    While not underestimating the value of useful knowledge and skills, it is suggested that education should also develop the subjective self of the learner. A distinction is drawn between an ‘additive’ view of education which simply furnishes the individual with knowledge and skills and a ‘transformative’ concept which concerns itself with changes to more central parts of the learner's self. In developing a concept of the subjective self, reference is made to the Enlightenment notion of the autonomous rational self (...)
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  30.  25
    Inculcation of Values for Best Practices in Student Support Services in Open and Distance Learning—The IGNOU Experience.Sampat Ray Agrawal & Chinmoy Kumar Ghosh - 2014 - Journal of Human Values 20 (1):95-111.
    Student support services are the cardinal features of the Open and Distance Learning System. In India, the Indira Gandhi National Open University, 13 state open universities and over 200 Distance Education Institutes attached to conventional universities and private/autonomous institutes offering programmes through the distance mode have all created adequate provisions for learner support services and the systems, rules, regulations and norms have been put in place. However, it is significant that a learner in the ODL system remains away from (...)
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  31.  78
    The Subject and the World: Educational challenges.Ingerid S. Straume - 2015 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 47 (13-14):1465-1476.
    The paper explores the notion of ‘the subject’ in the context of education as an alternative to more limited concepts such as the student or learner. Drawing on the thought of Cornelius Castoriadis, the subject under consideration is a conscious, self-reflective subject that organizes and modifies itself in relation to a world of significations. Through the capacity for conscious self-modification, the subject becomes a self-reflective agent in a socially instituted world of significations. For Castoriadis, this kind of subjectivity is not (...)
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  32.  7
    Development of interactional competence: Changes in participation over cooking sessions.Machiko Achiba - 2012 - Pragmatics and Society 3 (1):1-30.
    This study explores the development of the interactional competence of an 8-year-old, Japanese learner of English over three cooking sessions with native speakers of English at her home during her period of residence in Australia. The study draws upon Vygotsky’s zone of proximal development in order to elucidate the L2 child’s process of acquiring interactional competence in this unfamiliar social practice. The analysis reveals marked changes in the child’s participation pattern over time, moving from making relevant minimal responses to more (...)
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  33.  25
    Apprendre à l’'ge adulte : entre imitation et émancipationLearning: between imitation and emancipation'.Henri Vieille-Grosjean & Gabriel Di Patrizio - 2015 - Revue Phronesis 4 (1):40-50.
    The process learning for adults training joins in a space/time which can be considered as « communicative action ». Learning is for us a part of a space of sense referred to the notion of passage and thus process. It is well known today that one of its modalities, for adults as for children, leans on the imitation. On the other hand, the game of the interactions makes that the learnings are not passed on without an autonomous and mediate (...)
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  34.  10
    Visual borderlands: Visuality, performance, fluidity and art-science learning.Kathryn Grushka, Miranda Lawry, Ari Chand & Andy Devine - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (4):404-421.
    The image is the raw material of the twenty-first century. Images infiltrate all social and cultural spaces. Its digital-mediated realities drive communication, industry and knowledge. Images saturate life and adolescent learners are familiar with the participatory nature of image production and its social, educational and personal communicative realities. Vision and visibility, seeing and being now dominate how we inter-subjectively recognise ourselves and perform our world. We also find our aesthetic and embodied self increasingly constituted within imaging acts that are (...)
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  35. Experiments in ideography: curious devices for representing propositional attitudes and propositional nexuses.A. Latex Learner - unknown
    In the first of these prospective representations, I am using a sort of hollowedout upright box in the turnstile that represents belief ; below I will use a filled-in upright box to represent knowledge. I suspect that the second way I am imagining writing it - by putting the content believed in a thinly framed box (knowledge by contrast having something more, a heavy frame) - would have some advantages – for example when we consider some of the other phenomena (...)
     
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  36. Kusum virmani.E. S. L. Learners - 2004 - In Omkar N. Koul, Imtiaz S. Hasnain & Ruqaiya Hasan (eds.), Linguistics, theoretical and applied: a festschrift for Ruqaiya Hasan. Delhi: Creative Books. pp. 105.
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  37. Pieter am Seuren.Autonomous Versus Semantic Syntax - 1972 - Foundations of Language 8:237.
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  38. Never Mind the Trolley: The Ethics of Autonomous Vehicles in Mundane Situations.Johannes Himmelreich - 2018 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 21 (3):669-684.
    Trolley cases are widely considered central to the ethics of autonomous vehicles. We caution against this by identifying four problems. Trolley cases, given technical limitations, rest on assumptions that are in tension with one another. Furthermore, trolley cases illuminate only a limited range of ethical issues insofar as they cohere with a certain design framework. Furthermore, trolley cases seem to demand a moral answer when a political answer is called for. Finally, trolley cases might be epistemically problematic in several (...)
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  39.  33
    Persistent stress ‘deafness’: The case of French learners of Spanish.Emmanuel Dupoux, Núria Sebastián-Gallés, Eduardo Navarrete & Sharon Peperkamp - 2008 - Cognition 106 (2):682-706.
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  40.  35
    Ethical dilemmas are really important to potential adopters of autonomous vehicles.Tripat Gill - 2021 - Ethics and Information Technology 23 (4):657-673.
    The ethical dilemma of whether autonomous vehicles should protect the passengers or pedestrians when harm is unavoidable has been widely researched and debated. Several behavioral scientists have sought public opinion on this issue, based on the premise that EDs are critical to resolve for AV adoption. However, many scholars and industry participants have downplayed the importance of these edge cases. Policy makers also advocate a focus on higher level ethical principles rather than on a specific solution to EDs. But (...)
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  41.  10
    Classical Liberalism, Discrimination, and the Problem of Autonomous Cars.Michael Gentzel - 2020 - Science and Engineering Ethics 26 (2):931-946.
    This paper considers possible future legislation that requires the exclusive use of autonomous cars. The author develops and defends a ‘Liberal Argument Against Mandated Autonomous Cars’, which argues that such a law would be incompatible with classical liberalism, provided that the following condition holds: In the event where the car must ‘choose’ between running over a young person or an old person, or both, autonomous cars are programmed to respond by running over old people in order to (...)
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  42.  35
    Statistical learning in a serial reaction time task: access to separable statistical cues by individual learners.Ruskin H. Hunt & Richard N. Aslin - 2001 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 130 (4):658.
  43.  14
    Production efficiency can cause grammatical change: Learners deviate from the input to better balance efficiency against robust message transmission.Masha Fedzechkina & T. Florian Jaeger - 2020 - Cognition 196 (C):104115.
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  44. Designing AI for Explainability and Verifiability: A Value Sensitive Design Approach to Avoid Artificial Stupidity in Autonomous Vehicles.Steven Umbrello & Roman Yampolskiy - 2022 - International Journal of Social Robotics 14 (2):313-322.
    One of the primary, if not most critical, difficulties in the design and implementation of autonomous systems is the black-boxed nature of the decision-making structures and logical pathways. How human values are embodied and actualised in situ may ultimately prove to be harmful if not outright recalcitrant. For this reason, the values of stakeholders become of particular significance given the risks posed by opaque structures of intelligent agents (IAs). This paper explores how decision matrix algorithms, via the belief-desire-intention model (...)
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  45.  73
    Theoretical foundations for the responsibility of autonomous agents.Jaap Hage - 2017 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 25 (3):255-271.
    This article argues that it is possible to hold autonomous agents themselves, and not only their makers, users or owners, responsible for the acts of these agents. In this connection autonomous systems are computer programs that interact with the outside world without human interference. They include such systems as ‘intelligent’ weapons and self-driving cars. The argument is based on an analogy between human beings and autonomous agents and its main element asserts that if humans can be held (...)
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  46.  39
    Accepting Moral Responsibility for the Actions of Autonomous Weapons Systems—a Moral Gambit.Mariarosaria Taddeo & Alexander Blanchard - 2022 - Philosophy and Technology 35 (3):1-24.
    In this article, we focus on the attribution of moral responsibility for the actions of autonomous weapons systems (AWS). To do so, we suggest that the responsibility gap can be closed if human agents can take meaningful moral responsibility for the actions of AWS. This is a moral responsibility attributed to individuals in a justified and fair way and which is accepted by individuals as an assessment of their own moral character. We argue that, given the unpredictability of AWS, (...)
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  47.  46
    A study of the role of awareness in foreign language behavior: Aware versus unaware learners.Ronald P. Leow - 2000 - Studies in Second Language Acquisition 22 (4):557-584.
  48. How AI’s Self-Prolongation Influences People’s Perceptions of Its Autonomous Mind: The Case of U.S. Residents.Quan-Hoang Vuong, Viet-Phuong La, Minh-Hoang Nguyen, Ruining Jin, Minh-Khanh La & Tam-Tri Le - 2023 - Behavioral Sciences 13 (6):470.
    The expanding integration of artificial intelligence (AI) in various aspects of society makes the infosphere around us increasingly complex. Humanity already faces many obstacles trying to have a better understanding of our own minds, but now we have to continue finding ways to make sense of the minds of AI. The issue of AI’s capability to have independent thinking is of special attention. When dealing with such an unfamiliar concept, people may rely on existing human properties, such as survival desire, (...)
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  49.  40
    A Comparative Analysis of the Definitions of Autonomous Weapons Systems.Mariarosaria Taddeo & Alexander Blanchard - 2022 - Science and Engineering Ethics 28 (5):1-22.
    In this report we focus on the definition of autonomous weapons systems (AWS). We provide a comparative analysis of existing official definitions of AWS as provided by States and international organisations, like ICRC and NATO. The analysis highlights that the definitions draw focus on different aspects of AWS and hence lead to different approaches to address the ethical and legal problems of these weapons systems. This approach is detrimental both in terms of fostering an understanding of AWS and in (...)
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  50. Distributive justice as an ethical principle for autonomous vehicle behavior beyond hazard scenarios.Manuel Dietrich & Thomas H. Weisswange - 2019 - Ethics and Information Technology 21 (3):227-239.
    Through modern driver assistant systems, algorithmic decisions already have a significant impact on the behavior of vehicles in everyday traffic. This will become even more prominent in the near future considering the development of autonomous driving functionality. The need to consider ethical principles in the design of such systems is generally acknowledged. However, scope, principles and strategies for their implementations are not yet clear. Most of the current discussions concentrate on situations of unavoidable crashes in which the life of (...)
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