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Neural-Body Coupling for Emergent Locomotion: A Musculoskeletal
Neural-Body Coupling for Emergent Locomotion: A Musculoskeletal

... these robots are difficult to explain the role of the body as musculoskeletal system for locomotion behaviors. On the other hand, several researchers have focused on the animal body as musculoskeletal system. Tsujita et al. [11] achieved stable locomotion with a musculoskeletal quadruped robot, whil ...
MULTIPLE-AGENT PLANNING  SYSTEMS Kurt  Konolige Nils  J.  Nilsson
MULTIPLE-AGENT PLANNING SYSTEMS Kurt Konolige Nils J. Nilsson

... of these agents, the others are dynamic entities that possess information about the world, have goals, make plans to achieve these goals, and execute these plans. Thus, each agent must represent not only the usual information about objects in the world and the preconditions and effects of its own ac ...
2012 version HERE . - School of Computer Science
2012 version HERE . - School of Computer Science

... ALT is the Association for Learning Technology (http://www.alt.ac.uk/about-alt) Its annual conference ALT-C 2012: “A confrontation with reality” was held at the University of Manchester, UK, 11 - 13 September 2012 (http://www.alt.ac.uk/altc2012) Seb Schmoller, whom I met via the ComputingAtSchool em ...
A Medical Diagnosis System based on MAS Technology and Neural
A Medical Diagnosis System based on MAS Technology and Neural

... There are quite a number of different types of agents. For a good overview have a look at [OMG04]. This paper will only concentrate on one type, namely reactive agents. A reactive agent does not contain a representation of a central symbolic world model. Nor does it utilize complex symbolic reasoni ...
Informal and Formal Representations in
Informal and Formal Representations in

... correct, is pragmatically flawed. The argument is pragmatically wrong, since it is meant to say “Your system X is redundant and uninteresting, since we have system Y already, which suffices for everything you want to do.” Since this argument was widely accepted the focus in the field was set much to ...
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Chapter 1: Introduction to Expert Systems
Chapter 1: Introduction to Expert Systems

... The process of building an expert system: 1. The knowledge engineer establishes a dialog with the human expert to elicit knowledge. 2. The knowledge engineer codes the knowledge explicitly in the knowledge base. 3. The expert evaluates the expert system and gives a critique to the knowledge engineer ...
FraMoTEC: A Framework for Modular Task-Environment
FraMoTEC: A Framework for Modular Task-Environment

... Generally intelligent robots and systems should be evaluated based on their ability to learn new tasks over a wide range of domains. Few if any of the available evaluation methods for artificial intelligence (AI) systems address this need, and most even leave out important aspects of intelligence, s ...
interaction: the nervous and endocrine systems
interaction: the nervous and endocrine systems

... © Oxford University Press España, S. A. ...
Chap 12
Chap 12

... Integrated and seamless system that is capable of selecting, filtering and compiling data to send them in real time to designated users on demand. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall ...
Osama Almughrabi
Osama Almughrabi

... consciousness is integral to brain function and does not exist in some alternate nonphysical realm is directly related to ego theory. However, the leading neuroscientists studying consciousness are focusing on breaking down the components of consciousness, including Crick and Koch with their NCCs, ...
"Real-Time Systems: An Introduction and the State-of-the
"Real-Time Systems: An Introduction and the State-of-the

... used as a metric in achieving specified requirements. QoS requirements allow for trading off different performance parameters. For example, in some applications, users may be ‘‘charged’’ different rates depending on the level of the service required. The objective in such systems is the optimization ...
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Why Artificial Intelligence Needs a Task Theory--
Why Artificial Intelligence Needs a Task Theory--

... agents and pedagogy — these are not mutually exclusive but in fact ultimately necessary for achieving comprehensive evaluation of a wide range of learners in a wide range of circumstances.) Note also that we are not proposing to represent all tasks and environments accurately or in every detail, but ...
Artificial Intelligence
Artificial Intelligence

...  express the problem precisely  both involve all the 10 variables in the problem ...
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OBJECTIVES

... Knowledge Management • Tacit Knowledge – Expertise and experience not formally documented • Best Practices – Successful solutions or problem-solving methods developed by specific organization or industry • Organizational Memory – Stored learning from organization’s history – Used for decision making ...
Management Information Systems Chapter 12
Management Information Systems Chapter 12

... • Insufficient resources are available to structure and update the content in repositories. • Poor quality and high variability of content quality results from insufficient validating mechanisms. • Content in repositories lacks context, making documents difficult to understand. ...
Complex Biological Systems: When are Simple
Complex Biological Systems: When are Simple

... based on concentrations instead of actual counts. A Boolean model would distinguish only between “high” and “low” concentrations. Problem 3: Under what conditions can we trust that the simpler models will make mathematically equivalent predictions to the more elaborate (and biologically more realist ...
Ics 2405: Knowledge Based Systems
Ics 2405: Knowledge Based Systems

... Question two-(20 marks) a) A knowledge based systems (kbss) are developed to deal with particular application domain in which alternative techniques are unable to produce reliable and manageable solutions. Identify and discuss five aspects of human intelligence that could be used to characterize int ...
Safe Artificial Intelligence and Formal Methods
Safe Artificial Intelligence and Formal Methods

... requirements (e.g., speed limit of 20 mph when passing by a school), but the complete proof eventually cannot be achieved, because although the desired conclusion follows from some of the premises, other premises may eventually lead to resolution refutation. That’s it, two sets of premises may lead ...
Commentary: The Case for Epigenetic Inheritance in Evolution
Commentary: The Case for Epigenetic Inheritance in Evolution

... nucleic acid genome while phenotype is a property whose assignment must be distributed among entities at many or all levels of biological organization. In evolutionary biology there is a problem of hierarchy in the theory of selection due to this requirement for distributive assignment: to which lev ...
A Bio-inspired Redundant Sensing Architecture
A Bio-inspired Redundant Sensing Architecture

... details and unparalleled resolution. Anatomical studies determine the spatial density of the photoreceptors on the retina, which limits the peak foveal angular resolution to 20-30 arcseconds according to Shannon theory [1, 2]. There are also other imperfections due to nonuniform distribution of cell ...
Ch. 6 notes
Ch. 6 notes

... Gas exchange occurs in the alveoli of the lungs. Capillaries, very small blood vessels surrounding the alveoli, transport oxygen into the body and carbon dioxide out of the body. Lividity occurs when blood pools in the lowest part of the body after a person dies. Lividity provides clues about the ti ...
document1004
document1004

... its separate element - neuron - responds to incoming excitation - stimulus. This eclecticism was overcome and the views at the determination of ncuronal activity were adapted to the demands of systemic paradigm when the interpretation of neuronal activity as a response to synaptic inflow was abandon ...
Full Text - MECS Publisher
Full Text - MECS Publisher

... variables and the methods that operate on them into a single object. Conceptually, all interactions between an object and the rest of the system are via messages. Thus, the interface between an object and the rest of the system is defined by a set of allowed messages. In CBR, the object attributes r ...
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Incomplete Nature



Incomplete Nature: How Mind Emerged from Matter is a 2011 book by biological anthropologist Terrence Deacon. The book covers topics in biosemiotics, philosophy of mind, and the origins of life. Broadly, the book seeks to naturalistically explain ""aboutness"", that is, concepts like intentionality, meaning, normativity, purpose, and function; which Deacon groups together and labels as ententional phenomena.
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