A Cognitive Architecture for Machine Consciousness and Artificial Superintelligence: Thought Is Structured by the Iterative Updating of Working Memory
Jared Edward Reser

TL;DR
This paper proposes a cognitive architecture that models human-like thought processes by iteratively updating working memory, aiming to advance machine consciousness and superintelligence through structured attention and memory dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework for simulating thought by mimicking mammalian working memory dynamics, integrating persistent activity and synaptic potentiation in AI systems.
Findings
Iterative updating of working memory enhances cognitive organization.
The model supports continuous, incremental concept evolution over time.
Functional organization of behavior and awareness is achieved through memory dynamics.
Abstract
This article provides an analytical framework for how to simulate human-like thought processes within a computer. It describes how attention and memory should be structured, updated, and utilized to search for associative additions to the stream of thought. The focus is on replicating the dynamics of the mammalian working memory system, which features two forms of persistent activity: sustained firing (preserving information on the order of seconds) and synaptic potentiation (preserving information from minutes to hours). The article uses a series of figures to systematically demonstrate how the iterative updating of these working memory stores provides functional organization to behavior, cognition, and awareness. In a machine learning implementation, these two memory stores should be updated continuously and in an iterative fashion. This means each state should preserve a proportion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces · Cognitive Science and Mapping
