
Research Topics in Discovery and Artificial Intelligence
... 3:30pm–4:30pm Olsen 311 (The Media Lab) Refreshments will be served at 3:15pm ...
... 3:30pm–4:30pm Olsen 311 (The Media Lab) Refreshments will be served at 3:15pm ...
Time and Periodicity
... – William James’ list of mind still comprises modern ontology of cognition/behaviour: • Attention, conception, association, memory, perception, reasoning, instinct, emotions, ...
... – William James’ list of mind still comprises modern ontology of cognition/behaviour: • Attention, conception, association, memory, perception, reasoning, instinct, emotions, ...
PPT
... Conclusion • In near future we can have computers with as many processing elements as our brain, but: far fewer interconnections (wires or synapses) much faster updates. ...
... Conclusion • In near future we can have computers with as many processing elements as our brain, but: far fewer interconnections (wires or synapses) much faster updates. ...
Artificial intelligence
... the digital computer, with its native, human-like ability to process symbols, made it seem that the myth of the man-made intelligence would finally become reality. ...
... the digital computer, with its native, human-like ability to process symbols, made it seem that the myth of the man-made intelligence would finally become reality. ...
Artificial Intelligence 人工智能
... Hubert Dreyfus, argued that human reasoning actually involved very little "symbol processing" and a great deal of ...
... Hubert Dreyfus, argued that human reasoning actually involved very little "symbol processing" and a great deal of ...
Compton to Computer Science Gabriel Alatorre (Gabe), Software Engineer
... CS Overview Artificial Intelligence (AI) ...
... CS Overview Artificial Intelligence (AI) ...
Logic - Computing Science and Mathematics
... e.g. remembering someone's face, do we think in “words” – the rotation test) 2. psychological experiments (experiment on peoples behavior). What people say they do, and what they do are two different things e.g. recognizing caricatures. 3. brain imaging. Scans of brain show which parts use more oxyg ...
... e.g. remembering someone's face, do we think in “words” – the rotation test) 2. psychological experiments (experiment on peoples behavior). What people say they do, and what they do are two different things e.g. recognizing caricatures. 3. brain imaging. Scans of brain show which parts use more oxyg ...
PPT - Michael J. Watts
... By the same token, a machine doesn’t become…an intelligent machine, just because it can fool you into thinking that it’s thinking” o David B. Fogel, Blondie24: Playing at the Edge of AI pg 11 ...
... By the same token, a machine doesn’t become…an intelligent machine, just because it can fool you into thinking that it’s thinking” o David B. Fogel, Blondie24: Playing at the Edge of AI pg 11 ...
Intelligent Systems - Ubiquitous Computing Lab
... • The Loebner Prize Medal and cash award is presented annually to the designer of the computer system that best succeeds in passing a variant of the Turing Test. • The Loebner Prize Competition in Artificial Intelligence was established in 1990 by Hugh Loebner and was first held at the Boston Comput ...
... • The Loebner Prize Medal and cash award is presented annually to the designer of the computer system that best succeeds in passing a variant of the Turing Test. • The Loebner Prize Competition in Artificial Intelligence was established in 1990 by Hugh Loebner and was first held at the Boston Comput ...
Professional Issues. Artificial Intelligence.
... A brief history of AI. In spite of a wealth of technological successes there is no sign of : 1) Animal-level intelligence (and that includes insects). ...
... A brief history of AI. In spite of a wealth of technological successes there is no sign of : 1) Animal-level intelligence (and that includes insects). ...
Philosophy and Cogsci
... that cannot think, but pass the test : Blockhead : a stupid machine that stores all possible conversations within some limited duration. Blockhead is logically possible, but not practically possible. ...
... that cannot think, but pass the test : Blockhead : a stupid machine that stores all possible conversations within some limited duration. Blockhead is logically possible, but not practically possible. ...
FinGenius_Job_Description
... FinGenius’s global clients. The main responsibilities include: improving and expanding pre-existing systems, brainstorming to create new systems, and contributing to the experimental development of new technical features. Required Skills and Characteristics Fluency and proficiency in the English l ...
... FinGenius’s global clients. The main responsibilities include: improving and expanding pre-existing systems, brainstorming to create new systems, and contributing to the experimental development of new technical features. Required Skills and Characteristics Fluency and proficiency in the English l ...
Lec1-AIIntro - Donald Bren School of Information and Computer
... • Every art and every inquiry, and similarly every action and pursuit, is thought to aim at some good ...
... • Every art and every inquiry, and similarly every action and pursuit, is thought to aim at some good ...
PPT
... learning abilities, and human tutoring to progress to the next level” • “I don’t expect building habile systems to be easy or that they will be achievable in the next several years” ...
... learning abilities, and human tutoring to progress to the next level” • “I don’t expect building habile systems to be easy or that they will be achievable in the next several years” ...
Ethics of Artificial Intelligence www.AssignmentPoint.com The ethics
... There has been a recent outcry with regards to the engineering of artificialintelligence weapons and has even fostered up ideas of a robot takeover of mankind. AI weapons do present a type of danger different than that of human controlled weapons. Many governments have begun to fund programs to deve ...
... There has been a recent outcry with regards to the engineering of artificialintelligence weapons and has even fostered up ideas of a robot takeover of mankind. AI weapons do present a type of danger different than that of human controlled weapons. Many governments have begun to fund programs to deve ...
Turing Test and Natural Language Processing
... For each team, each member has a laptop with internet access Each team will pick randomly and independent to act either as a HUMAN or a CHATBOT For 5 minutes, the class will ask each team arbitrary questions Each time a different team member will answer the question As HUMAN, a team will come up wit ...
... For each team, each member has a laptop with internet access Each team will pick randomly and independent to act either as a HUMAN or a CHATBOT For 5 minutes, the class will ask each team arbitrary questions Each time a different team member will answer the question As HUMAN, a team will come up wit ...
What we have learnt in this course COS116: Instructor Sanjeev Arora 05/04/06
... Examples of Type (b) questions • What is the difference between a virus and a worm? All things being equal, which would tend to propagate faster? • Explain in a couple of lines how the current internet deals with congestion issues. ...
... Examples of Type (b) questions • What is the difference between a virus and a worm? All things being equal, which would tend to propagate faster? • Explain in a couple of lines how the current internet deals with congestion issues. ...
Artificial Intelligence
... – “The goals of AI research is to construct computer programs which exhibit behaviors that we call intelligent behavior when we observe it in human beings – E. Feigenbaum & J. Feldman – “AI is the science of making computers smart. It is practiced both by those who want to make computers more useful ...
... – “The goals of AI research is to construct computer programs which exhibit behaviors that we call intelligent behavior when we observe it in human beings – E. Feigenbaum & J. Feldman – “AI is the science of making computers smart. It is practiced both by those who want to make computers more useful ...
Alan C. Schultz Director Navy Center for Applied
... Human-robot interaction, autonomous robots, machine learning, evolutionary computation. ...
... Human-robot interaction, autonomous robots, machine learning, evolutionary computation. ...
CSCI 5582 Artificial Intelligence
... AI problems are those that we really don’t know how to solve. Otherwise, we would use a direct solution (and it would not be considered AI anymore) Real AI systems are often mixtures of various algorithms/techniques, ...
... AI problems are those that we really don’t know how to solve. Otherwise, we would use a direct solution (and it would not be considered AI anymore) Real AI systems are often mixtures of various algorithms/techniques, ...
FA06 cs188 lecture 1..
... Rational behavior: doing the “right thing” The right thing: that which is expected to maximize goal achievement, given the available information Doesn't necessarily involve thinking, e.g., blinking Thinking can be in the service of rational action ...
... Rational behavior: doing the “right thing” The right thing: that which is expected to maximize goal achievement, given the available information Doesn't necessarily involve thinking, e.g., blinking Thinking can be in the service of rational action ...
Could computers understand language?
... interfaces, although a major breakthrough of NL interfaces is needed to prove this conclusively ...
... interfaces, although a major breakthrough of NL interfaces is needed to prove this conclusively ...
biology
... Alan Turing, mathematician, cryptographer “father of computer science” Turing provided an influential formalization of the concept of the algorithm and computation with the Turing machine in 1936. Turing machines were not meant to be a practical computing technology, but a thought experiment about t ...
... Alan Turing, mathematician, cryptographer “father of computer science” Turing provided an influential formalization of the concept of the algorithm and computation with the Turing machine in 1936. Turing machines were not meant to be a practical computing technology, but a thought experiment about t ...
Philosophy of artificial intelligence

The philosophy of artificial intelligence attempts to answer such questions as: Can a machine act intelligently? Can it solve any problem that a person would solve by thinking? Are human intelligence and machine intelligence the same? Is the human brain essentially a computer? Can a machine have a mind, mental states and consciousness in the same sense humans do? Can it feel how things are?These three questions reflect the divergent interests of AI researchers, cognitive scientists and philosophers respectively. The scientific answers to these questions depend on the definition of ""intelligence"" and ""consciousness"" and exactly which ""machines"" are under discussion.Important propositions in the philosophy of AI include:Turing's ""polite convention"": If a machine behaves as intelligently as a human being, then it is as intelligent as a human being. The Dartmouth proposal: ""Every aspect of learning or any other feature of intelligence can be so precisely described that a machine can be made to simulate it."" Newell and Simon's physical symbol system hypothesis: ""A physical symbol system has the necessary and sufficient means of general intelligent action."" Searle's strong AI hypothesis: ""The appropriately programmed computer with the right inputs and outputs would thereby have a mind in exactly the same sense human beings have minds."" Hobbes' mechanism: ""Reason is nothing but reckoning.""↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑