MODULE SPECIFICATION Template Guidance
... show how a computer is built up from a relatively simple digital circuit by successive elaboration to form a number of logical layers of functionality; show that hardware and software are often equivalent in this context; allow the students to appreciate the typical facilities and mechanisms u ...
... show how a computer is built up from a relatively simple digital circuit by successive elaboration to form a number of logical layers of functionality; show that hardware and software are often equivalent in this context; allow the students to appreciate the typical facilities and mechanisms u ...
Internship Opportunities in Netherlands, Norway and Denmark
... students with leadership training and internship opportunities at forprofit and non-profit organizations. The AIESEC network includes over 86,000 members in 124 countries and territories. It is the largest student run organization in the world, being present in over 2,400 universities across the glo ...
... students with leadership training and internship opportunities at forprofit and non-profit organizations. The AIESEC network includes over 86,000 members in 124 countries and territories. It is the largest student run organization in the world, being present in over 2,400 universities across the glo ...
Prolog - a little more history, 1
... based on resolution" <-- "...the foundation of Prolog"! " led to much work "around the world on resolution-based theorem-proving"; " BUT -- there are MANY "possible algorithms for automated inference based on [this idea of] resolution, with widely varying degrees of power and efficiency" -- "...Prol ...
... based on resolution" <-- "...the foundation of Prolog"! " led to much work "around the world on resolution-based theorem-proving"; " BUT -- there are MANY "possible algorithms for automated inference based on [this idea of] resolution, with widely varying degrees of power and efficiency" -- "...Prol ...
Implementing Ordered Disjunction Using Answer Set Solvers for
... Abstract. Logic programs with ordered disjunction (LPODs) add a new connective to logic programming. This connective allows us to represent alternative, ranked options for problem solutions in the heads of rules: A×B intuitively means: if possible A, but if A is not possible, then at least B. The se ...
... Abstract. Logic programs with ordered disjunction (LPODs) add a new connective to logic programming. This connective allows us to represent alternative, ranked options for problem solutions in the heads of rules: A×B intuitively means: if possible A, but if A is not possible, then at least B. The se ...
Document
... Decisions are based on information. More often than not, decision-relevant information is imperfect in the sense that it is in part imprecise and/or uncertain and/or incomplete and/or conflicting and/or partially true. There is a long list of methods for dealing with imperfect information. Included ...
... Decisions are based on information. More often than not, decision-relevant information is imperfect in the sense that it is in part imprecise and/or uncertain and/or incomplete and/or conflicting and/or partially true. There is a long list of methods for dealing with imperfect information. Included ...
towards a philosophy of computer science
... It has been identified that there is a small risk of a brake problem in certain Scientific models. While customer safety has always been the primary focus for Scientific, we never intended the handbook to be a normative prescription of how the brakes should behave but rather as a theory or predictio ...
... It has been identified that there is a small risk of a brake problem in certain Scientific models. While customer safety has always been the primary focus for Scientific, we never intended the handbook to be a normative prescription of how the brakes should behave but rather as a theory or predictio ...
Reciprocal tutoring using cognitive tools
... problem, the learning environment provides several cognitive tools. The first facilitates the input of Lisp programs without making syntactic errors. The second facilitates the diagnosis of a buggy program and the formulation of hints about the bugs. The third facilitates the communication process o ...
... problem, the learning environment provides several cognitive tools. The first facilitates the input of Lisp programs without making syntactic errors. The second facilitates the diagnosis of a buggy program and the formulation of hints about the bugs. The third facilitates the communication process o ...
Do software agents know what they talk about?
... Autonomousness: synchronisation mechanisms are not hard coded. Encounters have an economical meaning because of the self interested property of the agents. This differes from a situation where components are build to co-operate. ...
... Autonomousness: synchronisation mechanisms are not hard coded. Encounters have an economical meaning because of the self interested property of the agents. This differes from a situation where components are build to co-operate. ...
datalog - FORTH-ICS
... of those rules. In general, for a recursive Datalog program, the same operator can be repeatedly applied on facts produced by previous applications of it. It is easy to see that the immediate consequence operator is monotone. Another crucial observation is that it will not introduce any constants be ...
... of those rules. In general, for a recursive Datalog program, the same operator can be repeatedly applied on facts produced by previous applications of it. It is easy to see that the immediate consequence operator is monotone. Another crucial observation is that it will not introduce any constants be ...
Artificial Intelligence
... certainty factors, and determine appropriate areas for their applications. In Chapter 4, we introduce fuzzy logic and discuss the philosophical ideas behind it. We present the concept of fuzzy sets, consider how to represent a fuzzy set in a computer, and examine operations of fuzzy sets. We also de ...
... certainty factors, and determine appropriate areas for their applications. In Chapter 4, we introduce fuzzy logic and discuss the philosophical ideas behind it. We present the concept of fuzzy sets, consider how to represent a fuzzy set in a computer, and examine operations of fuzzy sets. We also de ...
TOWARDS A PHILOSOPHY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE
... It has been identified that there is a small risk of a brake problem in certain Scientific models. While customer safety has always been the primary focus for Scientific, we never intended the handbook to be a normative prescription of how the brakes should behave but rather as a theory or predictio ...
... It has been identified that there is a small risk of a brake problem in certain Scientific models. While customer safety has always been the primary focus for Scientific, we never intended the handbook to be a normative prescription of how the brakes should behave but rather as a theory or predictio ...
GRANULAR COMPUTING: A NEW PARADIGM IN INFORMATION
... agents in which each pursues its own agenda, exploits its environment, develops its own problem solving strategy and establishes required communication strategies, to form a more effective human-centered information system (Bargiela and Pedrycz 2008). Another school of thought is rough-granular comp ...
... agents in which each pursues its own agenda, exploits its environment, develops its own problem solving strategy and establishes required communication strategies, to form a more effective human-centered information system (Bargiela and Pedrycz 2008). Another school of thought is rough-granular comp ...
ubicom-ch08-slides
... • Intelligent behaviour arises out of system’s interaction with environment rather than as result of complex internal knowledge representation or reasoning about events. • Action selection is at heart of the intelligent system. – in the simple case is driven by current state of environment. ...
... • Intelligent behaviour arises out of system’s interaction with environment rather than as result of complex internal knowledge representation or reasoning about events. • Action selection is at heart of the intelligent system. – in the simple case is driven by current state of environment. ...
Symmetry Reduction for SAT Representations of Transition Systems
... verification, symmetries have been handled by symmetry reduction algorithms that eliminate redundant search caused by symmetries. In this work, we investigate symmetry handling in a problem in the intersection of these two areas: handling symmetries in representations of transition systems in the pr ...
... verification, symmetries have been handled by symmetry reduction algorithms that eliminate redundant search caused by symmetries. In this work, we investigate symmetry handling in a problem in the intersection of these two areas: handling symmetries in representations of transition systems in the pr ...
View CV - Learning Research and Development Center (LRDC)
... Learning Research and Development Center Internal Grant entitled “Improving Learning from Peer Review with NLP and ITS techniques” ($150,000) 2009-2010. With Chris Schunn and Diane Litman. Learning Research and Development Center Internal Grant entitled “Measuring Classroom Discussions in Mathematic ...
... Learning Research and Development Center Internal Grant entitled “Improving Learning from Peer Review with NLP and ITS techniques” ($150,000) 2009-2010. With Chris Schunn and Diane Litman. Learning Research and Development Center Internal Grant entitled “Measuring Classroom Discussions in Mathematic ...
integrating ai techniques in sdlc: requirements phase perspective
... major focus is typically the discovery and prediction of the key requirements issues initially and then analyzing them individually. To make this task easy, there is a promising tool of AI called neural networks, which is used for problems that require classification given some predictive input feat ...
... major focus is typically the discovery and prediction of the key requirements issues initially and then analyzing them individually. To make this task easy, there is a promising tool of AI called neural networks, which is used for problems that require classification given some predictive input feat ...
implementing a decision support system for online job seeking
... structured decision-making problems in order to support better judgment amongst decisionmakers. The concept of DSS has been defined as a system using management activities and decision-making types (Gory & Morton, 2005). Decision-making process stages in DSS consist of four stages: intelligence stag ...
... structured decision-making problems in order to support better judgment amongst decisionmakers. The concept of DSS has been defined as a system using management activities and decision-making types (Gory & Morton, 2005). Decision-making process stages in DSS consist of four stages: intelligence stag ...
A Framework for Abstract Group Argumentation
... Dung’s approach is monolithic in the sense that there are no means to structure a set of arguments any further. This is at odds with real world argumentation scenarios, be they informal as in everyday conversation, or institutionalized as in the legal domain. In such scenarios, one typically finds m ...
... Dung’s approach is monolithic in the sense that there are no means to structure a set of arguments any further. This is at odds with real world argumentation scenarios, be they informal as in everyday conversation, or institutionalized as in the legal domain. In such scenarios, one typically finds m ...
FLP Semantics Without Circular Justifications for General Logic
... Well-Justified FLP Answer Sets for General Logic Programs As mentioned in the introduction, rules H ← B in a logic program differ essentially from implications B ⊃ H in classical logic because rules define a level mapping on their answer sets such that answers at upper levels are derived from answer ...
... Well-Justified FLP Answer Sets for General Logic Programs As mentioned in the introduction, rules H ← B in a logic program differ essentially from implications B ⊃ H in classical logic because rules define a level mapping on their answer sets such that answers at upper levels are derived from answer ...
A Knowledge-Based Approach to Lexical Analogy
... We describe here a knowledge-based approach called KNOW-BEST (KNOWledge-Based Entertainment and Scholastic Testing). In the absence of a robust ability to determine arbitrary relationships among terms, KNOWBEST employs the more general notion of analogical similarity to rank possible solution candid ...
... We describe here a knowledge-based approach called KNOW-BEST (KNOWledge-Based Entertainment and Scholastic Testing). In the absence of a robust ability to determine arbitrary relationships among terms, KNOWBEST employs the more general notion of analogical similarity to rank possible solution candid ...
MODULE SPECIFICATION Template Guidance
... arrays and strings, direct and indirect access, memory and pointers, iteration and recursion and data structures. These concepts will be illustrated by practical example in a suitable language. Please note: This is a non-compensatable module. ...
... arrays and strings, direct and indirect access, memory and pointers, iteration and recursion and data structures. These concepts will be illustrated by practical example in a suitable language. Please note: This is a non-compensatable module. ...
Fuzzy Logic - Authentic Leadership Center
... Even when Parminedes proposed the first version of this law (around 400 B.C.) there were strong and immediate objections: For example, Heraclitus proposed that things could be simultaneously true and not true (Brule, 1985). In anticipation of fuzzy logic, Plato in Phaedrus (Liu, 1999), considers a t ...
... Even when Parminedes proposed the first version of this law (around 400 B.C.) there were strong and immediate objections: For example, Heraclitus proposed that things could be simultaneously true and not true (Brule, 1985). In anticipation of fuzzy logic, Plato in Phaedrus (Liu, 1999), considers a t ...
FrameNet on the Way to Babel: Creating a Bilingual FrameNet
... technique introduced by Niemann and Gurevych ...
... technique introduced by Niemann and Gurevych ...
FrameNet on the Way to Babel: Creating a Bilingual
... technique introduced by Niemann and Gurevych ...
... technique introduced by Niemann and Gurevych ...
Extending Partial Representations of Interval Graphs
... Interse tion Representations. In this paper, we are interested in intersection representations which assign geometric objects to vertices of graphs and which encode edges by intersections of the objects. Formally, an intersection representation R of G is a collection of sets {Rv : v ∈ V (G)} such th ...
... Interse tion Representations. In this paper, we are interested in intersection representations which assign geometric objects to vertices of graphs and which encode edges by intersections of the objects. Formally, an intersection representation R of G is a collection of sets {Rv : v ∈ V (G)} such th ...