
5-Discipline of HCI
... of technology, but rather the bridging between the two. So you always have to have one eye open to the questions: – What can the technology do? – How can you build it ? – What are the possibilities? ...
... of technology, but rather the bridging between the two. So you always have to have one eye open to the questions: – What can the technology do? – How can you build it ? – What are the possibilities? ...
pdf
... the challenges and goals of interactionist AI are strikingly similar to those facing ubicomp today; and, therefore, technical solutions developed by interactionist AI researchers may prove to have relevance to these contemporary challenges. Yet if this is the case, given the existing interchanges be ...
... the challenges and goals of interactionist AI are strikingly similar to those facing ubicomp today; and, therefore, technical solutions developed by interactionist AI researchers may prove to have relevance to these contemporary challenges. Yet if this is the case, given the existing interchanges be ...
Performance
... Note: these lectures are often supplemented with other materials and also problems from the text worked out on the blackboard. You’ll want to customize these lectures for your class. The student audience for these lectures have had assembly language programming and exposure to logic design ...
... Note: these lectures are often supplemented with other materials and also problems from the text worked out on the blackboard. You’ll want to customize these lectures for your class. The student audience for these lectures have had assembly language programming and exposure to logic design ...
pdf
... Microsoft Research, Redmond, WA, U.S.A. Supervisor: Dr. John Manferdelli, Anti-Piracy Group Worked on Digital Rights Management; designed methods that use control- and data-flow analysis on binary program code to embed hard-to-break license authentication protocols in arbitrary programs. Intern, Vis ...
... Microsoft Research, Redmond, WA, U.S.A. Supervisor: Dr. John Manferdelli, Anti-Piracy Group Worked on Digital Rights Management; designed methods that use control- and data-flow analysis on binary program code to embed hard-to-break license authentication protocols in arbitrary programs. Intern, Vis ...
Emotion and Robotics
... • Understand intelligence and adaptation – laws and rules are not sufficient for understanding or predicting human behavior and intelligence (e.g. how to sift thru many possible choices) (Damasio, Picard) – simulated learning agents influenced by emotions (e.g., emotion as reward) (Breazeal, Broe ...
... • Understand intelligence and adaptation – laws and rules are not sufficient for understanding or predicting human behavior and intelligence (e.g. how to sift thru many possible choices) (Damasio, Picard) – simulated learning agents influenced by emotions (e.g., emotion as reward) (Breazeal, Broe ...
Levinson_Deep_Blue_Is_still_an_infant
... certainly does not have a notion of redundancy applied to chess positions - as in the value of overprotection explained by Nimzowitch, and also probably does not have a notion of "repairing" any given aspect of a chess position. Self-Reorganizing As AI agents develop they will need to be able to mak ...
... certainly does not have a notion of redundancy applied to chess positions - as in the value of overprotection explained by Nimzowitch, and also probably does not have a notion of "repairing" any given aspect of a chess position. Self-Reorganizing As AI agents develop they will need to be able to mak ...
MCS 8100/CSC 2114 : Artificial Intelligence
... - Programs that behave (externally) like humans • Computational models of human thought processes ? ...
... - Programs that behave (externally) like humans • Computational models of human thought processes ? ...
call for papers - IUI 2017
... vibrant lifestyle well beyond the expectations of a Mediterranean island. ACM IUI is where the Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) community meets the Artificial Intelligence (AI), with contributions from related fields such as psychology, behavioral science, cognitive science, computer graphics, desig ...
... vibrant lifestyle well beyond the expectations of a Mediterranean island. ACM IUI is where the Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) community meets the Artificial Intelligence (AI), with contributions from related fields such as psychology, behavioral science, cognitive science, computer graphics, desig ...
Document
... bad effects (ex. The net makes information and opportunities more easily available to people isolated by geography or by political system. It also makes crime fighting and low enforcement more difficult ) • Trade-offs and controversy: increasing security means reducing convenience. ...
... bad effects (ex. The net makes information and opportunities more easily available to people isolated by geography or by political system. It also makes crime fighting and low enforcement more difficult ) • Trade-offs and controversy: increasing security means reducing convenience. ...
DCP 1172: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence
... make computers thinks … machine with minds, in the full and literal sense” (Haugeland 1985) ...
... make computers thinks … machine with minds, in the full and literal sense” (Haugeland 1985) ...
Wrinkles, Wormholes, and Hamlet
... man to write well, there are required three necessaries: to read the best authors, observe the best speakers, and much exercise of his own style” (2001:179). The “exercise” of stage plays, says Crane, churns out material change in the world from the collision of imitation and personal “style.” Play ...
... man to write well, there are required three necessaries: to read the best authors, observe the best speakers, and much exercise of his own style” (2001:179). The “exercise” of stage plays, says Crane, churns out material change in the world from the collision of imitation and personal “style.” Play ...
From Reaction To Cognition: 5th European Workshop On Modelling
... '93, Neuchatel, Switzerland, August ... / Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence) pdf, then you have come on to correct site. We own From Reaction to Cognition: 5th European Workshop on Modelling Autonomous Agents in a Multi-Agent World, MAAMAW '93, Neuchatel, Switzerland, August ... / Lecture Not ...
... '93, Neuchatel, Switzerland, August ... / Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence) pdf, then you have come on to correct site. We own From Reaction to Cognition: 5th European Workshop on Modelling Autonomous Agents in a Multi-Agent World, MAAMAW '93, Neuchatel, Switzerland, August ... / Lecture Not ...
AAAI Proceedings Template
... these hypotheses. This effectively creates a layered or deep belief network, which is more robust to changes in environmental conditions (e.g. lighting, camera position, type of objects). ...
... these hypotheses. This effectively creates a layered or deep belief network, which is more robust to changes in environmental conditions (e.g. lighting, camera position, type of objects). ...
Read paper The big issues
... In contrast to the inference engine, the knowledge base is domain-specific and is as complicated as a cognitive skill requires. Domain knowledge is what distinguishes the ability to troubleshoot a circuit from the ability to understand the meaning of a sentence. Both require knowledge but of differe ...
... In contrast to the inference engine, the knowledge base is domain-specific and is as complicated as a cognitive skill requires. Domain knowledge is what distinguishes the ability to troubleshoot a circuit from the ability to understand the meaning of a sentence. Both require knowledge but of differe ...
Idealizations of Uncertainty, and Lessons from Artificial Intelligence
... 1974) was asked by Parliament to evaluate the state of AI research in the UK, and reported an utter failure of the field to advance on its “grandiose objectives”. In the USA, ARPA, the agency now known as DARPA, received a similar report from the American Study Group. Funding for AI researcher was d ...
... 1974) was asked by Parliament to evaluate the state of AI research in the UK, and reported an utter failure of the field to advance on its “grandiose objectives”. In the USA, ARPA, the agency now known as DARPA, received a similar report from the American Study Group. Funding for AI researcher was d ...
Karma Quiz - University of Bristol
... • In the Abhidharma karma, at the time of death, is divided into a hierarchy of four basic types: weighty, proximate, habitual, and performed. The nature of one’s death is conditioned by one’s karma. If a deed that is deemed to be ‘weighty’ has been performed it is that particular action that deter ...
... • In the Abhidharma karma, at the time of death, is divided into a hierarchy of four basic types: weighty, proximate, habitual, and performed. The nature of one’s death is conditioned by one’s karma. If a deed that is deemed to be ‘weighty’ has been performed it is that particular action that deter ...
MEETING FLORIDI`S CHALLENGE TO ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
... Of course, anyone convinced not only of AI's ability to eventually create creatures that appear to have minds but also of its ability to produce artificial minds, will want to show that Floridi's challenge can be surmounted. One of the remarkable aspects of his article is that it targets both "weak" ...
... Of course, anyone convinced not only of AI's ability to eventually create creatures that appear to have minds but also of its ability to produce artificial minds, will want to show that Floridi's challenge can be surmounted. One of the remarkable aspects of his article is that it targets both "weak" ...
Classification Problem Solving
... classes are stereotypes that are hierarchically organized, and the process of identification is one of matching observations of an unknown entity against features of known classes. A paradigmatic example is identification of a plant or animal, using a guidebook of features, such as coloration, struc ...
... classes are stereotypes that are hierarchically organized, and the process of identification is one of matching observations of an unknown entity against features of known classes. A paradigmatic example is identification of a plant or animal, using a guidebook of features, such as coloration, struc ...
computerlanguage
... frequency and word associations. Word associations are determined by providing a window of three words (more or less) on each side of the targeted word. (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 379) ...
... frequency and word associations. Word associations are determined by providing a window of three words (more or less) on each side of the targeted word. (Fromkin Rodman Hyams 379) ...
Strawson`s take on moral responsibility applied to Intelligent Systems
... by definition not totally controlled by other agents, since the agent would then not be autonomous. The actions of the agent cannot be understood as random, but must be understood as part of a plan, a goal or an intention to act and knowingly cause consequences. It is this interpretation of intellig ...
... by definition not totally controlled by other agents, since the agent would then not be autonomous. The actions of the agent cannot be understood as random, but must be understood as part of a plan, a goal or an intention to act and knowingly cause consequences. It is this interpretation of intellig ...
Cognitive Medical Multiagent Systems
... offer advantages in problem solving versus a system that does not have intelligence [3, 5, 10, 49]. Sometimes a system’s intelligence can be measured according to how efficiently and flexibly the system can solve problems (intelligence in problem solving). The purpose of the endowment of an agent wi ...
... offer advantages in problem solving versus a system that does not have intelligence [3, 5, 10, 49]. Sometimes a system’s intelligence can be measured according to how efficiently and flexibly the system can solve problems (intelligence in problem solving). The purpose of the endowment of an agent wi ...
A Case Study in Developmental Robotics
... In a paper presented 1996, at the 3rd World’s Behaviourist Congress, and entitled “AI (re-) discovers behaviorism and other analogies” (Stojanov et al., 1996a) we related the situation in AI in the mid 80’s to the situation in psychology in the ‘30s, when the so called “physics envy” led to the rise ...
... In a paper presented 1996, at the 3rd World’s Behaviourist Congress, and entitled “AI (re-) discovers behaviorism and other analogies” (Stojanov et al., 1996a) we related the situation in AI in the mid 80’s to the situation in psychology in the ‘30s, when the so called “physics envy” led to the rise ...
Information Technology and Artificial Intelligence
... The history of computers can be traced back to the early 19th Century and Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace and their idea of the Analytical Engine. Based on the science and technology of his time, Babbage never completed the construction of the Analytical Engine, but it anticipated many of the moder ...
... The history of computers can be traced back to the early 19th Century and Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace and their idea of the Analytical Engine. Based on the science and technology of his time, Babbage never completed the construction of the Analytical Engine, but it anticipated many of the moder ...
The 25 International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence
... performance than either alone. To enable this, AI techniques must not only accommodate humans in the decision-making loop, but to go to great lengths to make such participation as natural and simple as possible. Building such cognitive computing systems and agents will thus require contributions fro ...
... performance than either alone. To enable this, AI techniques must not only accommodate humans in the decision-making loop, but to go to great lengths to make such participation as natural and simple as possible. Building such cognitive computing systems and agents will thus require contributions fro ...
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.""↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑