The Problem of Expensive Chunks and Its Solution by Restricting Expressiveness (1985)
| Venue: | IN D. H. HOLDING (ED.), HUMAN SKILLS |
| Citations: | 53 - 4 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Tambe85theproblem,
author = {Milind Tambe and Allen Newell and Paul S. Rosenbloom},
title = {The Problem of Expensive Chunks and Its Solution by Restricting Expressiveness},
journal = {IN D. H. HOLDING (ED.), HUMAN SKILLS},
year = {1985},
volume = {10},
pages = {203--226}
}
Years of Citing Articles
OpenURL
Abstract
Soar is an architecture for a system that is intended to be capable of general intelligence. Chunking, a simple experience-based learning mechanism, is Soar's only learning mechanism. Chunking creates new items of information, called chunks, based on the results of problem-solving and stores them in the knowledge base. These chunks are accessed and used in appropriate later situations to avoid the problem-solving required to determine them. It is already well-established that chunking improves performance in Soar when viewed in terms of the subproblems required and the number of steps within a subproblem. However, despite the reduction in number of steps, sometimes there may be a severe degradation in the total run time. This problem arises due to expensive chunks, i.e., chunks that require a large amount of effort in accessing them from the knowledge base. They pose a major problem for Soar, since in their presence, no guarantees can be given about Soar's performance.







