
Welcome to the premier issue of our new website. In celebration, for the first time, we offer a new section of featured articles. In this issue we have three articles which provide the basis for a new area of study: Comparative Intelligence. Two of these articles - Barnett’s 1980 study of barnyard animals and its replication 37 years later, both published here at C&SJ - present evidence of inertial processes in human intelligent systems, which exist in high-dimensioinal non-Euclidean spaces. A third article, also published in C&SJ, replicated on four prominent Large Language Models (LLMs), shows that these AIs are restricted to Euclidean, non-inertial processes. Finally, and for the first time anywhere, we present two articles by three of the LLMs themselves. Together, for the first time, this research provides a basis for the study of the ways in which different cognitive architectures process information.
– Ed.
ISSN 2164-0769
Claude (Anthropic), DeepSeek, and ChatGPT-5 (OpenAI)
AI systems discover their own architectural differences through dialogue.
ChatGPT-5
How geometric analysis reveals cognitive fingerprints in AI systems.
McIntosh, Robert, Joseph Woelfel
Originally published in 2017, this classic article has recently formed the basis for major research into the architecture of intelligent systems, and we reprise it here to make it accessible to that discussion.
Barnett, George
Originally published in 1980, this classic article has recently formed the basis for major research into the architecture of intelligent systems, and we reprise it here to make it accessible to that discussion.
McIntosh, Robert, Joseph Woelfel
Ancient beliefs still dominant in social science research claim that the effectiveness of a message depends in part on the credbility of the communicator.This stands in stark contrast to modern neurosience, whch says "neurons that fire togther wire together." This article, originally published in C&SJ in 2019, reports on research that shows that human cognitive processes are multidimenional and noon-Euclidean, and that the location of a source,message concepts and receivers in space determines the direction in which its force will be exerted. An unanticipated finding showed that alteriing two sides of the triangle HCRA-beneficial-attractive caused a violation of the triangle inequalities rule. Human subjects accept this change at face value even as the space in which the three lie becomes increasingly warped and non-Euclidean. When administered to LLMs, however, the LLM's modify the unmanipulated distances in characteristic ways to make the triangles Euclidean again. This is a novel finding, and a characteristic difference between Hebbian human intelligences and LLMs. --Ed.
Woelfel, Joseph (2019Dec04).
Anderton, B., Calabrese, C. J., Featherstone, J. D, Barnett, G. A., Woelfel, J. (2019Nov15)
McIntosh, R., Woelfel, J., 2019
SwiaT, S., 2018NOV1.
Tutzauer, F., 2018NOV.
McIntosh, R., Woelfel, J., 2017
Iacobucci, A., 2017
Serota, K., Fink, E. L., Noell, J., Woelfel, J.1975., 2017
Woelfel, J., 2014May03
Barnett, G.A., Fink, E.L., Chang, H.J.1988
Lovejoy, K,E., 2014May03
Lovejoy, K., Catelier J., Evans C., Lohiser, A., Chu, I.H., 2014May03
Saxton, G.D., & Guo, C., 2018NOV.
Vishwanath, A.,Egnoto,M.,Ortega,C.R. 2017
Sabdhaus, D.A.,Fink,E.L.,Kaplowitz,S.A. 2017
Brandt, D.R., & Barnett, G.A., 2017
Lee, H.,J., & Woelfel, J., 2017
Chen, H., Evans, C., Battelson, B., Zubrow, E., Woelfel, J., 201
Lckaff, D., Kosey., R., Tutzauer, F., 2017
Serota, K., Cody, M., Barnett, G.A., Taylor, J.1977., 2017
Serota, K. (1976)., 2017
Taylor, J., Barnett, G.A., Serota, K. (1975, April)., 2017
Communication & Science Journal recognizes the central role of communication in science. As Niels Bohr said: “Science is the observation of phenomena and the communication of the results to others who must check them.”
A RAH Publication