
CPSC 699 – Plan One - Critical Junction Software
... operate autonomously in an environment to achieve a particular goal using the abilities bestowed upon it by its creators; in essence the giving of life to one’s program. An agent’s potential to achieve human-like interaction with its environment, including other agents, has given a new direction to ...
... operate autonomously in an environment to achieve a particular goal using the abilities bestowed upon it by its creators; in essence the giving of life to one’s program. An agent’s potential to achieve human-like interaction with its environment, including other agents, has given a new direction to ...
CIS 690 - Kansas State University
... – Informal: “does the right thing, given what it believes from what it perceives” – What is “the right thing”? • First approximation: action that maximizes success of agent • Limitations to this definition? – Issues to be addressed now • How to evaluate success • When to evaluate success – Issues to ...
... – Informal: “does the right thing, given what it believes from what it perceives” – What is “the right thing”? • First approximation: action that maximizes success of agent • Limitations to this definition? – Issues to be addressed now • How to evaluate success • When to evaluate success – Issues to ...
here
... Researchers have been working on an artificial-intelligence computer program designed to mimic the way an analyst uses financial news. In simulated trading, the program beat the S&P 500, and when combined with quantitative stock-picking techniques, it saw a return on trades of more than 20%. To make ...
... Researchers have been working on an artificial-intelligence computer program designed to mimic the way an analyst uses financial news. In simulated trading, the program beat the S&P 500, and when combined with quantitative stock-picking techniques, it saw a return on trades of more than 20%. To make ...
PDF
... Scope: IEA/AIE 2016 continues the tradition of emphasizing applications of applied intelligent systems to solve real-life problems in all areas including engineering, science, industry, automation & robotics, business & finance, medicine and biomedicine, bioinformatics, cyberspace, and human-machine ...
... Scope: IEA/AIE 2016 continues the tradition of emphasizing applications of applied intelligent systems to solve real-life problems in all areas including engineering, science, industry, automation & robotics, business & finance, medicine and biomedicine, bioinformatics, cyberspace, and human-machine ...
How far should AI replace human sense?
... algorithms are being used to instantly search through thousands of cases to identify legal precedents for use in court cases and even to make judgments. In the US, the Missouri Sentencing Commission has developed an Automated Sentencing Application which reportedly calculates the cost of incarcerati ...
... algorithms are being used to instantly search through thousands of cases to identify legal precedents for use in court cases and even to make judgments. In the US, the Missouri Sentencing Commission has developed an Automated Sentencing Application which reportedly calculates the cost of incarcerati ...
PRACTICE EXERCISE 1 LISTENING: “The curly fry conundrum
... 5.people $1,500 each person for a dinner with a small glass of the wine. It was worth ten times 6 more the cost of the wine in publicity for his restaurant. Was it worth the money? Well, it is 7.doubtful if you would complain after which you had paid so much for a meal. One man in the 8.fine wine bu ...
... 5.people $1,500 each person for a dinner with a small glass of the wine. It was worth ten times 6 more the cost of the wine in publicity for his restaurant. Was it worth the money? Well, it is 7.doubtful if you would complain after which you had paid so much for a meal. One man in the 8.fine wine bu ...
How to Pass a Turing Test: Syntactic Semantics, Natural
... fly. One way is to say that 'fly' is used metaphorically with respect to planes birds fly; planes only "fly"- but this is one of those metaphorsthat have become so ingrained in our everyday language that we no longer recognize them as such. Turingmay have had this in mind when he spoke - in the ital ...
... fly. One way is to say that 'fly' is used metaphorically with respect to planes birds fly; planes only "fly"- but this is one of those metaphorsthat have become so ingrained in our everyday language that we no longer recognize them as such. Turingmay have had this in mind when he spoke - in the ital ...
Artificial intelligence
... same rights as a human being? The idea also appears in modern science fiction: the film Artificial Intelligence: A.I. considers a machine in the form of a small boy which has been given the ability to feel human emotions, including, tragically, the capacity to suffer. This issue, now known as "robot ...
... same rights as a human being? The idea also appears in modern science fiction: the film Artificial Intelligence: A.I. considers a machine in the form of a small boy which has been given the ability to feel human emotions, including, tragically, the capacity to suffer. This issue, now known as "robot ...
Human-like Behavior, Alas, Demands Human
... internal state information. Like some other approaches, such as Steve (Rickel and Johnson, 1997), I use artificial intelligence planning algorithms as the foundation of a richer model of cognition. However, plans are just one aspect of internal state. Emotion and personality clearly have a strong an ...
... internal state information. Like some other approaches, such as Steve (Rickel and Johnson, 1997), I use artificial intelligence planning algorithms as the foundation of a richer model of cognition. However, plans are just one aspect of internal state. Emotion and personality clearly have a strong an ...
Turing Tests with Turing Machines
... are not fully recognised. A solution for this has been formalised as the so-called DarwinWallace distribution of environments (or tasks) [11]. The outcome of all this is that it is increasingly an issue whether intelligence might be needed to measure intelligence. This can be interpreted or develope ...
... are not fully recognised. A solution for this has been formalised as the so-called DarwinWallace distribution of environments (or tasks) [11]. The outcome of all this is that it is increasingly an issue whether intelligence might be needed to measure intelligence. This can be interpreted or develope ...
CS 188: Artificial Intelligence Course Staff Course Information
... § Rational: maximally achieving pre-defined goals § Rationality only concerns what decisions are made (not the thought process behind them) ...
... § Rational: maximally achieving pre-defined goals § Rationality only concerns what decisions are made (not the thought process behind them) ...
CS 294-5: Statistical Natural Language Processing
... Brains (human minds) are very good at making rational decisions, but not perfect Brains aren’t as modular as software, so hard to reverse engineer! “Brains are to intelligence as wings are to flight” Lessons learned from the brain: memory and simulation are key to decision making ...
... Brains (human minds) are very good at making rational decisions, but not perfect Brains aren’t as modular as software, so hard to reverse engineer! “Brains are to intelligence as wings are to flight” Lessons learned from the brain: memory and simulation are key to decision making ...
intelligence singularity
... • Inside process resembles a radiating black hole observed from the outside. • Maximally compressed information is indistinguishable from random noise. • Too much information collapses: A library that contains all possible books has zero information content. ...
... • Inside process resembles a radiating black hole observed from the outside. • Maximally compressed information is indistinguishable from random noise. • Too much information collapses: A library that contains all possible books has zero information content. ...
Model Construction in General Intelligence
... want to highlight two interrelated aspects of our findings. First, subjects construct occurrent models of this system as a hierarchical network of metaphors of different scope. And second, these temporary hierarchies scaffold the further development of the subjects’ conceptualizations, that is, of t ...
... want to highlight two interrelated aspects of our findings. First, subjects construct occurrent models of this system as a hierarchical network of metaphors of different scope. And second, these temporary hierarchies scaffold the further development of the subjects’ conceptualizations, that is, of t ...
The Alpha-Beta Procedure The Alpha-Beta Procedure
... Introduction to Artificial Intelligence Lecture 10: Two-Player Games II ...
... Introduction to Artificial Intelligence Lecture 10: Two-Player Games II ...
Intelligence, Control and the Artificial Mind
... a first approach the implemented systems were only usable as decision support systems for humans but with the development of real-time expert system shells it was possible to use the inference engines to implement closed-loop real-time controllers. At the same time, the developments in fuzzy logic a ...
... a first approach the implemented systems were only usable as decision support systems for humans but with the development of real-time expert system shells it was possible to use the inference engines to implement closed-loop real-time controllers. At the same time, the developments in fuzzy logic a ...
Intelligence Without Reason
... gence. There was a requirement that intelligence be reactive to dynamic aspects of the environment, that a mobile robot operate on time scales similar to those of animals and humans, and that intelligence be able to generate robust behavior in the face of uncertain sen sors, an unpredicted environm ...
... gence. There was a requirement that intelligence be reactive to dynamic aspects of the environment, that a mobile robot operate on time scales similar to those of animals and humans, and that intelligence be able to generate robust behavior in the face of uncertain sen sors, an unpredicted environm ...
REASONING ANd dECISION - Université Paul Sabatier
... another). We have also proposed algorithms to learn lexicographic preferences - when some components of the menu are more important than others. These results have been obtained in collaboration with researchers from the LAMSADE - University Paris-Dauphine and from Mahasarakham University in Thailan ...
... another). We have also proposed algorithms to learn lexicographic preferences - when some components of the menu are more important than others. These results have been obtained in collaboration with researchers from the LAMSADE - University Paris-Dauphine and from Mahasarakham University in Thailan ...
Document
... value to a state gives a unique next state Probabilistic FSM: the transition function defines a distribution of output states for each input to a state CSC411 ...
... value to a state gives a unique next state Probabilistic FSM: the transition function defines a distribution of output states for each input to a state CSC411 ...
a review on diagnosis and intervention tools based on artificial
... environment according to their convenience. It uses different Artificial Intelligence techniques in order to realize adaptive course generation, student modeling, interactive exercises, student and parent feedback and a knowledge representation which is suitable for the semantic Web. In ActiveMath t ...
... environment according to their convenience. It uses different Artificial Intelligence techniques in order to realize adaptive course generation, student modeling, interactive exercises, student and parent feedback and a knowledge representation which is suitable for the semantic Web. In ActiveMath t ...
Sponsor Program
... and provide opportunities for students who otherwise would be unable to attend. You will be investing in the future of artificial intelligence technology by supporting AAAI-04/IAAI-04 student travel, accommodations, and other conference activities. In addition to becoming a sponsor of AAAI-04/IAAI-0 ...
... and provide opportunities for students who otherwise would be unable to attend. You will be investing in the future of artificial intelligence technology by supporting AAAI-04/IAAI-04 student travel, accommodations, and other conference activities. In addition to becoming a sponsor of AAAI-04/IAAI-0 ...
AAAI-05 / IAAI-05 Sponsor Program
... programs and provide opportunities for students who otherwise would be unable to attend. You will be investing in the future of artificial intelligence technology by supporting AAAI-05/IAAI-05 student travel, accommodations, and other conference activities. In addition to becoming a sponsor of AAAI- ...
... programs and provide opportunities for students who otherwise would be unable to attend. You will be investing in the future of artificial intelligence technology by supporting AAAI-05/IAAI-05 student travel, accommodations, and other conference activities. In addition to becoming a sponsor of AAAI- ...
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.""↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑