Paper List
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Formation of Artificial Neural Assemblies by Biologically Plausible Inhibition Mechanisms
This work addresses the core limitation of the Assembly Calculus model—its fixed-size, biologically implausible k-WTA selection process—by introducing...
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How to make the most of your masked language model for protein engineering
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of efficiently sampling high-quality, diverse protein sequences from Masked Language Models (MLMs) for pr...
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Module control in youth symptom networks across COVID-19
This paper addresses the core challenge of distinguishing whether a prolonged societal stressor (COVID-19) fundamentally reorganizes the architecture ...
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JEDI: Jointly Embedded Inference of Neural Dynamics
This paper addresses the core challenge of inferring context-dependent neural dynamics from noisy, high-dimensional recordings using a single unified ...
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ATP Level and Phosphorylation Free Energy Regulate Trigger-Wave Speed and Critical Nucleus Size in Cellular Biochemical Systems
This work addresses the core challenge of quantitatively predicting how the cellular energy state (ATP level and phosphorylation free energy) governs ...
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Packaging Jupyter notebooks as installable desktop apps using LabConstrictor
This paper addresses the core pain point of ensuring Jupyter notebook reproducibility and accessibility across different computing environments, parti...
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SNPgen: Phenotype-Supervised Genotype Representation and Synthetic Data Generation via Latent Diffusion
This paper addresses the core challenge of generating privacy-preserving synthetic genotype data that maintains both statistical fidelity and downstre...
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Continuous Diffusion Transformers for Designing Synthetic Regulatory Elements
This paper addresses the challenge of efficiently generating novel, cell-type-specific regulatory DNA sequences with high predicted activity while min...
Dual-Laws Model for a theory of artificial consciousness
Department of mechano-informatics, The University of Tokyo, Japan
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of developing a comprehensive, testable theory of consciousness that bridges biological and artificial systems, moving beyond narrow generative mechanisms to encompass functional aspects and causal efficacy.
核心创新
- Methodology Proposes seven fundamental questions (phenomena, self, causation, state, function, contents, universality) as a minimum necessary framework for evaluating consciousness theories, shifting focus from purely generative mechanisms to functional aspects.
- Theory Introduces the Dual-Laws Model (DLM) that formalizes consciousness through supervenience relationships with independent dynamics at two levels, enabling inter-level causation without relying on neural-specific implementations.
- Methodology Unifies the DLM with dual-process theories by mapping Type 1 processes to continuous feedback control at the base level and Type 2 processes to discrete algorithmic control at the supervenience level.
主要结论
- The DLM provides a formal framework where supervenient functions (X_i = b_i(x_i)) enable independent dynamics at two levels, allowing inter-level causation through negative feedback control mechanisms.
- Conscious systems require two unique capabilities: autonomy in goal construction and cognitive decoupling from external stimuli, distinguishing them from instruction-following machines.
- The theory rejects panpsychism and single-layer dynamical systems, proposing that consciousness emerges from dual-level feedback control where the supervenience level (corresponding to 'I') modifies index sequences that determine error functions.
摘要: Objectively verifying the generative mechanism of consciousness is extremely difficult because of its subjective nature. As long as theories of consciousness focus solely on its generative mechanism, developing a theory remains challenging. We believe that broadening the theoretical scope and enhancing theoretical unification are necessary to establish a theory of consciousness. This study proposes seven questions that theories of consciousness should address: phenomena, self, causation, state, function, contents, and universality. The questions were designed to examine the functional aspects of consciousness and its applicability to system design. Next, we will examine how our proposed Dual-Laws Model (DLM) can address these questions. Based on our theory, we anticipate two unique features of a conscious system: autonomy in constructing its own goals and cognitive decoupling from external stimuli. We contend that systems with these capabilities differ fundamentally from machines that merely follow human instructions. This makes a design theory that enables high moral behavior indispensable.