Candidate for Chair Yolanda Gil University of Southern California
... systems, and planning, scheduling, and resource management in distributed, real-time environments. Another area of importance is developing compelling computer-based educational systems for K-12 STEM applications. The potential is great, and I sincerely believe that AI can deliver. This is my second ...
... systems, and planning, scheduling, and resource management in distributed, real-time environments. Another area of importance is developing compelling computer-based educational systems for K-12 STEM applications. The potential is great, and I sincerely believe that AI can deliver. This is my second ...
CHAPT9-SocialRobotics
... A social robot is an autonomous robot that interacts and communicates with humans or other autonomous physical agents by following social behaviors and rules. This suggests that a social robot must have a physical embodiment. Social robot should communicate and interact with humans and/or embodied a ...
... A social robot is an autonomous robot that interacts and communicates with humans or other autonomous physical agents by following social behaviors and rules. This suggests that a social robot must have a physical embodiment. Social robot should communicate and interact with humans and/or embodied a ...
Intelligent Multiagent Systems
... Internet, collects data from different sources, filters them, and presents the ...
... Internet, collects data from different sources, filters them, and presents the ...
KANTRA: Human-Machine Interaction for Intelligent Robots
... uses several camera systems to generate an environment model and to perform assembly tasks. A fundamental requirement in human-machine interaction for intelligent robots is the ability to refer to objects in the robot’s environment. Hence, the interface and the intelligent system need similar enviro ...
... uses several camera systems to generate an environment model and to perform assembly tasks. A fundamental requirement in human-machine interaction for intelligent robots is the ability to refer to objects in the robot’s environment. Hence, the interface and the intelligent system need similar enviro ...
Chapter 9: Decison Support Systems
... • Online analytical processing is used to analyze complex relationships among large amounts of data stored in multidimensional databases. Data mining analyzes large stores of historical data contained in data warehouses. • Decision support systems are interactive computer-based information systems t ...
... • Online analytical processing is used to analyze complex relationships among large amounts of data stored in multidimensional databases. Data mining analyzes large stores of historical data contained in data warehouses. • Decision support systems are interactive computer-based information systems t ...
Metrics and benchmarks in human-robot interaction: Recent
... management (i.e., coordinating the actions of robots and human users), manipulation (i.e., physical robot interaction with the environment), and social (i.e., social interaction tasks between robots and human users). Similarly, Olsen and Goodrich (2003) offered a group of metrics for evaluating human ...
... management (i.e., coordinating the actions of robots and human users), manipulation (i.e., physical robot interaction with the environment), and social (i.e., social interaction tasks between robots and human users). Similarly, Olsen and Goodrich (2003) offered a group of metrics for evaluating human ...
ID-CSH - Truman State University
... no way to do these. Any human output, including that with specified complexity, can be produced by mechanisms including chance. ...
... no way to do these. Any human output, including that with specified complexity, can be produced by mechanisms including chance. ...
View PDF - CiteSeerX
... WfMS can provide active support to a business process by controlling the routing of work around the organisation automatically. This is done based on input describing the flow, the decisions, the exceptions, the resource to be used, etc. It co-ordinates user and system participants, together with th ...
... WfMS can provide active support to a business process by controlling the routing of work around the organisation automatically. This is done based on input describing the flow, the decisions, the exceptions, the resource to be used, etc. It co-ordinates user and system participants, together with th ...
Just an Artifact - Department of Computer Science
... a functional degree of social homogeneity. This is a classic theme in functionalist sociology [Parsons, 1991]. This is sometimes expressed as the function of protecting the social organism [Hobbes, 1651; Hölldobler and Wilson, 2008]. In other words, ethics has evolved into a contributor to human s ...
... a functional degree of social homogeneity. This is a classic theme in functionalist sociology [Parsons, 1991]. This is sometimes expressed as the function of protecting the social organism [Hobbes, 1651; Hölldobler and Wilson, 2008]. In other words, ethics has evolved into a contributor to human s ...
A Rule-Based Expert System for Mineral Identification
... mined because of the need for a valuable element they contain or an intrinsic property they may have. Other minerals are mined for their beauty and rareness, thus ...
... mined because of the need for a valuable element they contain or an intrinsic property they may have. Other minerals are mined for their beauty and rareness, thus ...
Interpreting streaming biosignals: in search of best approaches to augmenting mobile health monitoring with machine learning for adaptive clinical decision support
... The first example is a healthcare application for telemonitoring of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. This was one of three prototype applications developed during the Awareness project. The second example is a wellbeing application designed to support weight management with the goal of preventi ...
... The first example is a healthcare application for telemonitoring of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. This was one of three prototype applications developed during the Awareness project. The second example is a wellbeing application designed to support weight management with the goal of preventi ...
Recent and Current Artificial Intelligence Research in
... enable an AI system to do likewise. We have implemented a language-understanding system in the role of an educable cognitive agent whose task domain includes language understanding and whose discourse domain includes knowledge of its own language. This system has just one (initially primitive) langu ...
... enable an AI system to do likewise. We have implemented a language-understanding system in the role of an educable cognitive agent whose task domain includes language understanding and whose discourse domain includes knowledge of its own language. This system has just one (initially primitive) langu ...
Research Priorities for Robust and Beneficial Artificial Intelligence
... product of human intelligence; we cannot predict what we might achieve when this intelligence is magnified by the tools AI may provide, but the eradication of disease and poverty are not unfathomable. Because of the great potential of AI, it is valuable to investigate how to reap its benefits while ...
... product of human intelligence; we cannot predict what we might achieve when this intelligence is magnified by the tools AI may provide, but the eradication of disease and poverty are not unfathomable. Because of the great potential of AI, it is valuable to investigate how to reap its benefits while ...
A conversation with a 3D face - Dipartimento di Informatica
... The type of conversations we simulate, in our first prototype of MagiCster, are information-giving dialogs: in these dialogs, the main function of Greta is to provide some kind of information to the User, in a given domain. She has therefore an overall ‘communication goal’, that she tries to achieve ...
... The type of conversations we simulate, in our first prototype of MagiCster, are information-giving dialogs: in these dialogs, the main function of Greta is to provide some kind of information to the User, in a given domain. She has therefore an overall ‘communication goal’, that she tries to achieve ...
Full size
... So far, all of the learning algorithms we’ve studied construct an explicit hypothesis about the data set. This is nice because it lets us do a lot of the training ahead of time. It has the weakness that we must then use the same hypothesis fro each element in the test set. One way to get around this ...
... So far, all of the learning algorithms we’ve studied construct an explicit hypothesis about the data set. This is nice because it lets us do a lot of the training ahead of time. It has the weakness that we must then use the same hypothesis fro each element in the test set. One way to get around this ...
VIII SEM
... Lectures:4 hrs Per Week Theory:100 Marks Practical: 2 hrs Per Week Term Work: 25 Marks Oral: 25 Marks Objectives:Upon completion of this course students will be able to undersatnd and employ the fundamental concepts and mechanisms which forms the basis of the design of the parallel computation model ...
... Lectures:4 hrs Per Week Theory:100 Marks Practical: 2 hrs Per Week Term Work: 25 Marks Oral: 25 Marks Objectives:Upon completion of this course students will be able to undersatnd and employ the fundamental concepts and mechanisms which forms the basis of the design of the parallel computation model ...
2 Components of Information Technology
... decision-making problems, and their combinations. In recent years, DSSs have been developed as integrated environments which are oriented to several stages of the decision-making process. The list of components for modern DSSs is as follows: 1. Models (multicriteria techniques, processing of interva ...
... decision-making problems, and their combinations. In recent years, DSSs have been developed as integrated environments which are oriented to several stages of the decision-making process. The list of components for modern DSSs is as follows: 1. Models (multicriteria techniques, processing of interva ...
KBMS Requirements of Knowledge
... can be asserted. Because of this restricted form of the TELL operation. the ASK operation of DBMS can be efficiently implemented by direct retrieval. As more complex TELL operations (e.g., including rules, incomplete information, complex objects, etc.) are permitted, efficiency (and, with further ex ...
... can be asserted. Because of this restricted form of the TELL operation. the ASK operation of DBMS can be efficiently implemented by direct retrieval. As more complex TELL operations (e.g., including rules, incomplete information, complex objects, etc.) are permitted, efficiency (and, with further ex ...
Document
... systems 1. Expert systems are restricted to a very narrow domain of expertise. If a patient has more than one disease, we cannot rely on MYCIN. In fact, therapy prescribed for the blood disease might even be harmful because of the other disease. 2. Because of the narrow domain, expert systems are no ...
... systems 1. Expert systems are restricted to a very narrow domain of expertise. If a patient has more than one disease, we cannot rely on MYCIN. In fact, therapy prescribed for the blood disease might even be harmful because of the other disease. 2. Because of the narrow domain, expert systems are no ...
MICHAEL E. FARMER, PhD Associate Professor Computer Science
... a variety of semesters. These studies have allowed students to both help me with ongoing research (the work on using information theory for motion segmentation, chaos modeling of network traffic), and also allowed them to explore areas of computer science that are not typically offered (designing an ...
... a variety of semesters. These studies have allowed students to both help me with ongoing research (the work on using information theory for motion segmentation, chaos modeling of network traffic), and also allowed them to explore areas of computer science that are not typically offered (designing an ...
PDF
... computer talk was a human or a machine [6]. Science fiction has immortalized several humanoid robots full of humanity, and it is nowadays speculating about the role the human being and the machine may play in this “pas à deux” in which we are irremissibly engaged [12]. Where is current robotics rese ...
... computer talk was a human or a machine [6]. Science fiction has immortalized several humanoid robots full of humanity, and it is nowadays speculating about the role the human being and the machine may play in this “pas à deux” in which we are irremissibly engaged [12]. Where is current robotics rese ...
Bibliography
... T. Matsukawa and E. Yokota. Development of the concept dictionaryimplementation of lexical knowledge. In J. Pustejovsky and S. Bergler (eds.). In the Proceedings of the ACL Workshop on Lexical Semantics and Knowledge Representation, 206-223. Berkeley, CA, June, 1991. ...
... T. Matsukawa and E. Yokota. Development of the concept dictionaryimplementation of lexical knowledge. In J. Pustejovsky and S. Bergler (eds.). In the Proceedings of the ACL Workshop on Lexical Semantics and Knowledge Representation, 206-223. Berkeley, CA, June, 1991. ...
Mind, computational theories of
... of individual cells and a ‘scanner’, whose primitive processes consist in registering whether it is scanning a ‘1’ or a ‘0’, and then moving left and right from cell to cell (see Turing machines). This is only one among many possible computational architectures. What is essential to a computer is me ...
... of individual cells and a ‘scanner’, whose primitive processes consist in registering whether it is scanning a ‘1’ or a ‘0’, and then moving left and right from cell to cell (see Turing machines). This is only one among many possible computational architectures. What is essential to a computer is me ...
Constructive Memory in Design Thinking
... “Sequences of acts are composed such that subsequent experiences categorize and hence give meaning to what was experienced before”. The implication of this is that memory is not laid down and fixed at the time of the original sensate experience but is somehow a function of what comes later as well. ...
... “Sequences of acts are composed such that subsequent experiences categorize and hence give meaning to what was experienced before”. The implication of this is that memory is not laid down and fixed at the time of the original sensate experience but is somehow a function of what comes later as well. ...