Relations (1)

related 2.81 — strongly supporting 6 facts

Memory and reasoning are both fundamental cognitive processes examined in cognitive psychology {fact:3, fact:5} and are essential components in the architecture of Large Language Models {fact:1, fact:2}. Furthermore, both are identified as intellectual virtues that facilitate the pursuit of truth [1] and serve as distinct cognitive processes evaluated within the framework of reliabilism [2].

Facts (6)

Sources
Virtue Epistemology | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy iep.utm.edu Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimJohn Greco defines intellectual virtues as innate faculties or acquired habits, such as perception, reliable memory, and good reasoning, that enable a person to reach truth and avoid error in a relevant field.
Psychology and Cognitive Science on Consciousness klinikong.com Klinikong 1 fact
claimCognitive psychology examines internal mental processes, including perception, memory, reasoning, and decision-making.
Epistemology | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy iep.utm.edu Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimReliabilism evaluates beliefs by identifying the specific cognitive process that led to their formation, such as the specific sense used, the source of testimony, the type of reasoning, or the recency of a memory.
The Synergy of Symbolic and Connectionist AI in LLM-Empowered ... arxiv.org arXiv 1 fact
referenceThe architecture of an LAA consists of a neural sub-system (LLM) acting as a core controller, which orchestrates a symbolic sub-system and external tools, including components for planning, reasoning, memory, and tool-use.
Naturalized epistemology and cognitive science | Intro to... - Fiveable fiveable.me Fiveable 1 fact
claimCognitive psychology focuses on mental processes including perception, attention, memory, and reasoning.
A Survey of Incorporating Psychological Theories in LLMs - arXiv arxiv.org arXiv 1 fact
claimCognitive psychology is applied across all stages of Large Language Model development, specifically for modeling internal mechanisms such as reasoning, memory, and attention.