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Course unit Descriptor
Course unit Descriptor

... master the knowledge engineering skills, be able to apply the knowledge representation paradigms and create consistent, well-designed knowledge bases as a crucial part of expert systems. They will also acquire knowledge to understand inherent inference mechanisms and conduct successful ES validation ...
What CPRs show: Summary of major issues
What CPRs show: Summary of major issues

... funding appropriate to maintain the long-term productive capacity of the HE system? • How does the government secure the outputs it wants and what incentives does it need to provide to do so? Are the right incentives given to institutions? • Do the funding mechanisms make it easier or more difficult ...
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

... ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE ...
My Personal Philosophy about Artificial Intelligence
My Personal Philosophy about Artificial Intelligence

... developing Watson, which is intended to be the world’s most “advanced question/answering” machineable to understand a question and respond with a precise, factual answer. (Thompson, Clive.) This is big step in the journey towards true artificial intelligence. With Watson we are actually able to conv ...
Artificial Intelligence - Academic Science,International Journal of
Artificial Intelligence - Academic Science,International Journal of

... So far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain. And so far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. -- Albert Einstein…the more one thinks about imprecision and the need to model and represent it, the more the problems with the current mathematical approach and pr ...
Artificial Intelligence
Artificial Intelligence

... environment they can change, 3) goal-oriented • agents focus on decision making • incorporate sensing, reasoning, planning ...
Intelligent Systems (Artificial Intelligence)
Intelligent Systems (Artificial Intelligence)

... • Artificial Intelligence, 3/e, 1992, 750 pages, Patrick Henry Winston, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ISBN: 0-201-53377-4 • Artificial Intelligence: A Guide to Intelligent Systems, Michael Negnevitsky, 440 pages, 2nd edition st (2005), Addison Wesley Publishing; ISBN: 0-321-20466-2, downloa ...
Artificialintelligence research revives its old ambitions
Artificialintelligence research revives its old ambitions

... disciplinary boundaries. Graduate students and postdocs funded through the center will have joint advisors, preferably drawn from different research areas.  Research themes The center’s four main research themes are also intrinsically interdisciplinary. They are the integration of intelligence, incl ...
Chapter 4
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... Good for diagnostic (what’s wrong?) and prescriptive (what to do?) problems ...
Chapter 4
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... Good for diagnostic (what’s wrong?) and prescriptive (what to do?) problems ...
International Standards - Artificial Intelligence Applications Institute
International Standards - Artificial Intelligence Applications Institute

... experience of working with small innovative companies, and with research groups in larger corporations • AIAI has considerable experience of working with small innovative companies, with research groups in larger corporations, and with some of the most forward looking government agencies worldwide • ...
Dr. Holger Hoos
Dr. Holger Hoos

... In this talk, Hoos will focus on one particular type of complexity that has been of central interest to the evolutionary computation community, to artificial intelligence and far beyond, namely computational complexity, and in particular, NP-hardness. Hoos will investigate the question to which exte ...
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“Artificial intelligence (AI) may be defined as the branch of computer

... • AI is a collection of hard problems which can be solved by humans and other living things, but for which we don’t have good algorithms for solving. – e. g., understanding spoken natural language, medical diagnosis, learning, self-adaptation, reasoning, chess playing, proving math theories, etc. • ...
Chapter 10
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... Nowadays artificial intelligence problems can be divided into the next questions highly-effective inteligent interaction interface ofetn makes a conflict with the service-software or in the self-educational process which leads to the artificial intelligence procces crash Highly-effective computat ...
iea-aie 2011 call for papers - International Society of Applied
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... Organized in cooperation with: Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI); Association for Computing Machinery (ACM/SIGART, SIGKDD); Austrian Association for Artificial Intelligence (OeGAI); British Computer Society Specialist Group on Artificial Intelligence (BCS_SGAI); Europ ...
The Language Technology Lab of the German Research
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... The Language Technology Lab of the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI LT-Lab) offers a position in Berlin, Germany, as Text and Web Content Generation Researcher and Developer in language technology. The position is available starting September/October 2015 and is set in the co ...
Introduction to the Special Issue on Innovative Applications of
Introduction to the Special Issue on Innovative Applications of

... the payoff has already been substantial. In the second application, Nestor Rychtyckyj of Ford Motor Company deployed a machine translation system to translate vehicle assembly instructions from English to a variety of other languages (“Machine Translation for Manufacturing: A Case Study at Ford Moto ...
Intorduction to Artificial Intelligence Prof. Dechter ICS 270A
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NEW TRENDS IN NEUROCYBERNETICS

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... solutions tend not to constitute complete systems, but are most often embedded, and partially hidden to the end used, in larger software systems; for example, AI methods are exploited in many recommender systems and in Google’s search engine. In any case, some impressive applications are briefly des ...
Document
Document

... The Vision of Artificial Intelligence The field of artificial intelligence was launched in the summer of 1956 at the Dartmouth meeting. The audacious aim was to understand the mind in computational terms and reproduce all its abilities in computational artifacts.  Early researchers hoped to create ...
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AI winter

In the history of artificial intelligence, an AI winter is a period of reduced funding and interest in artificial intelligence research. The term was coined by analogy to the idea of a nuclear winter. The field has experienced several hype cycles, followed by disappointment and criticism, followed by funding cuts, followed by renewed interest years or decades later. There were two major winters in 1974–80 and 1987–93 and several smaller episodes, including: 1966: the failure of machine translation, 1970: the abandonment of connectionism, 1971–75: DARPA's frustration with the Speech Understanding Research program at Carnegie Mellon University, 1973: the large decrease in AI research in the United Kingdom in response to the Lighthill report, 1973–74: DARPA's cutbacks to academic AI research in general, 1987: the collapse of the Lisp machine market, 1988: the cancellation of new spending on AI by the Strategic Computing Initiative, 1993: expert systems slowly reaching the bottom, and 1990s: the quiet disappearance of the fifth-generation computer project's original goals.The term first appeared in 1984 as the topic of a public debate at the annual meeting of AAAI (then called the ""American Association of Artificial Intelligence""). It is a chain reaction that begins with pessimism in the AI community, followed by pessimism in the press, followed by a severe cutback in funding, followed by the end of serious research. At the meeting, Roger Schank and Marvin Minsky—two leading AI researchers who had survived the ""winter"" of the 1970s—warned the business community that enthusiasm for AI had spiraled out of control in the '80s and that disappointment would certainly follow. Three years later, the billion-dollar AI industry began to collapse.Hypes are common in many emerging technologies, such as the railway mania or the dot-com bubble. An AI winter is primarily a collapse in the perception of AI by government bureaucrats and venture capitalists. Despite the rise and fall of AI's reputation, it has continued to develop new and successful technologies. AI researcher Rodney Brooks would complain in 2002 that ""there's this stupid myth out there that AI has failed, but AI is around you every second of the day."" In 2005, Ray Kurzweil agreed: ""Many observers still think that the AI winter was the end of the story and that nothing since has come of the AI field. Yet today many thousands of AI applications are deeply embedded in the infrastructure of every industry."" He added: ""the AI winter is long since over.""
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