5.3 An Architecture Diagram for Human-Like General Intelligence 99 PERCEPTION/ ACTION LOWER Level SUBSYSTEMS PORTIONS OF Sean TRANSIENT | consolidation LONG ee | > ncmony ‘MEMORY | | memory q Y peewee Y h ———— | action | procepuna fT | clown SELECTION MEMORY — j¢———J WORKSPACE Fig. 5.2: Architecture of Working Memory and Reactive Processing, closely modeled on the LIDA architecture Figure 5.3, modeling motivation and action selection, is a lightly modified version of the Psi diagram from Joscha Bach’s book Principles of Synthetic Intelligence [Bac09|. The main difference from Psi is that in the integrative diagram the Psi motivated action framework is embedded in a larger, more complex cognitive model. Psi comes with its own theory of working and long-term memory, which is related to but different from the one given in the integrative diagram — it views the multiple memory types distinguished in the integrative diagram as emergent from a common memory substrate. Psi comes with its own theory of perception and action, which seems broadly consistent with the deep learning approach incorporated in the integrative diagram. Psi’s handling of working memory lacks the detailed, explicit workflow of LIDA, though it seems broadly conceptually consistent with LIDA. In Figure 5.3, the box labeled "Other portions of working memory" is labeled "Protocol and situation memory" in the original Psi diagram. The Perception, Action Execution and Action Selection boxes have fairly similar semantics to the similarly labeled boxes in the LIDA-like Figure 5.2, so that these diagrams may be viewed as overlapping. The LIDA model doesn’t explain action selection and planning in as much detail as Psi, so the Psi-like Figure 5.3 could be viewed as an elaboration of the action-selection portion of the LIDA-like Figure 5.2. In Psi, reinforcement is considered as part of the learning process involved in action selection and planning; in Figure 5.3 an explicit "reinforcement box" has been added