Artificial Intelligence and Humor
... 1. Ritchie, G. 2001. Current Directions in Computational Humour. Artif. Intell. Rev. 16, 2 (Oct. 2001), 119-135. DOI= http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1011610210506 2. Christian F. Hempelmann, Victor Raskin and Katrina E. Triezenberg. “Computer, Tell Me a Joke ... but Please Make it Funny: Computational ...
... 1. Ritchie, G. 2001. Current Directions in Computational Humour. Artif. Intell. Rev. 16, 2 (Oct. 2001), 119-135. DOI= http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1011610210506 2. Christian F. Hempelmann, Victor Raskin and Katrina E. Triezenberg. “Computer, Tell Me a Joke ... but Please Make it Funny: Computational ...
Analysis of Machine Learning Techniques for Intrusion Detection
... Intrusions. There are many machine learning techniques used in Intrusion Detection System and they comprised single, hybrid and ensemble classifiers. Many resources have been used on various machine learning techniques. These techniques work very well for IDS but it is known that there is not even a ...
... Intrusions. There are many machine learning techniques used in Intrusion Detection System and they comprised single, hybrid and ensemble classifiers. Many resources have been used on various machine learning techniques. These techniques work very well for IDS but it is known that there is not even a ...
An Introduction to Artificial Intelligence and Legal Reasoning: Using
... curiosity? To what extent and in what ways can artificial intelligence help real lawyers with real legal problems? [4] Computer programs can indeed solve legal problems. The fact that computer programs can model law is not necessarily simply of academic interest. Automated case research is one poten ...
... curiosity? To what extent and in what ways can artificial intelligence help real lawyers with real legal problems? [4] Computer programs can indeed solve legal problems. The fact that computer programs can model law is not necessarily simply of academic interest. Automated case research is one poten ...
A Review on Expert System and its Applications in Civil Engineering
... unambiguously updated. Expert systems fail to recognize the problems outside the area of their expertise and when no answer exists. For this reason, any output or advice from an expert system must be concluded and tested by a human expert [15]. ...
... unambiguously updated. Expert systems fail to recognize the problems outside the area of their expertise and when no answer exists. For this reason, any output or advice from an expert system must be concluded and tested by a human expert [15]. ...
CSE 5290: Artificial Intelligence
... models that emulate some of the observed properties of biological nervous systems and draw on the analogies of adaptive biological learning. The key element of the ANN paradigm is the novel structure of the information processing system. It is composed of a large number of highly interconnected proc ...
... models that emulate some of the observed properties of biological nervous systems and draw on the analogies of adaptive biological learning. The key element of the ANN paradigm is the novel structure of the information processing system. It is composed of a large number of highly interconnected proc ...
A Computational Foundation for the Study of Cognition
... of their states. The states in most computational formalisms have a combinatorial structure: a cell pattern in a cellular automaton, a combination of tape-state and head-state in a Turing machine, variables and registers in a Pascal program, and so on. All this can be accommodated within the framewo ...
... of their states. The states in most computational formalisms have a combinatorial structure: a cell pattern in a cellular automaton, a combination of tape-state and head-state in a Turing machine, variables and registers in a Pascal program, and so on. All this can be accommodated within the framewo ...
Machine Learning I - Mit - Massachusetts Institute of Technology
... 6.034 Artificial Intelligence. Copyright © 2006 by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. All rights reserved Slide 2.1.20 There are a couple of plausible strategies here. One would be to predict the majority outcome. The neighbor walked more times than she drove in this situation, so we might pred ...
... 6.034 Artificial Intelligence. Copyright © 2006 by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. All rights reserved Slide 2.1.20 There are a couple of plausible strategies here. One would be to predict the majority outcome. The neighbor walked more times than she drove in this situation, so we might pred ...
Toward a truly personal computer
... Copyright 1997 ACM, Association for Computing The files on this disk or server have been provided by ACM. Copyright and all rights therein are maintained by ACM. It is understood that all persons copying this information will adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by ACM’s copyright. These wo ...
... Copyright 1997 ACM, Association for Computing The files on this disk or server have been provided by ACM. Copyright and all rights therein are maintained by ACM. It is understood that all persons copying this information will adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by ACM’s copyright. These wo ...
Planning with h+ in Theory and Practice
... (Keyder and Geffner 2009) is another method for computing more accurate relaxed plans than hFF in order to get closer approximations to h+ . The local Steiner tree heuristic first computes a relaxed plan using the hFF/a method, then reduces the size of this plan by exploiting local improvement prope ...
... (Keyder and Geffner 2009) is another method for computing more accurate relaxed plans than hFF in order to get closer approximations to h+ . The local Steiner tree heuristic first computes a relaxed plan using the hFF/a method, then reduces the size of this plan by exploiting local improvement prope ...
Multirobot Coordination for Space Exploration
... we have the possibility of achieving increased capabilities while maintaining an adaptive and robust system. However, these multiagent systems are fundamentally different from other types of artificial intelligence in two ways. First, we have to promote coordination in a multiagent system (see figur ...
... we have the possibility of achieving increased capabilities while maintaining an adaptive and robust system. However, these multiagent systems are fundamentally different from other types of artificial intelligence in two ways. First, we have to promote coordination in a multiagent system (see figur ...
The Hanson-Yudkowsky AI-Foom Debate
... This simply isn’t the way I use the word “unFriendly.” I use it to refer to terminal values and to final behaviors. A single mind that is more powerful than any other on the playing field, but doesn’t run around killing people or telling them what to do, can be quite Friendly in both the intuitive ...
... This simply isn’t the way I use the word “unFriendly.” I use it to refer to terminal values and to final behaviors. A single mind that is more powerful than any other on the playing field, but doesn’t run around killing people or telling them what to do, can be quite Friendly in both the intuitive ...
Recent advances in computational models of natural argument
... The first is the structuring of communication protocols for interaction between software agents. One of the earliest examples 21 grew from the work on LA11 introducing a distributed component, demonstrating how arguments ~in the LA sense! could be exchanged between agents that maintained discrete be ...
... The first is the structuring of communication protocols for interaction between software agents. One of the earliest examples 21 grew from the work on LA11 introducing a distributed component, demonstrating how arguments ~in the LA sense! could be exchanged between agents that maintained discrete be ...
AUBER F13
... mathematics, and natural phenomena. It has been carried forward by James D. Murray and others, and though things get a lot more complex than the examples tackled by Turing, it is enough to make something more coherent from the confusion of impressions and models. ...
... mathematics, and natural phenomena. It has been carried forward by James D. Murray and others, and though things get a lot more complex than the examples tackled by Turing, it is enough to make something more coherent from the confusion of impressions and models. ...
Web 2.0 vs. the Semantic Web: A Philosophical Assessment
... What is the next stage in the development of the Web? At least since the dot-com mess, the question has kept pundits and techno-fans on their toes. The recent reshaping of the industry, with the blog-sphere coming to maturity (The Economist, 2008) has only increased the pressure. Recently, two disti ...
... What is the next stage in the development of the Web? At least since the dot-com mess, the question has kept pundits and techno-fans on their toes. The recent reshaping of the industry, with the blog-sphere coming to maturity (The Economist, 2008) has only increased the pressure. Recently, two disti ...
Decentralized POMDPs
... a reward depending on the state and the actions of both agents. Finally, each agent receives an individual observation of the new state. This framework allows modeling important real-world tasks for which the models in the previous chapters do not suffice. An example of such a task is load balancing ...
... a reward depending on the state and the actions of both agents. Finally, each agent receives an individual observation of the new state. This framework allows modeling important real-world tasks for which the models in the previous chapters do not suffice. An example of such a task is load balancing ...
Intelligence virtual analyst capability
... The intelligence analysts of the Canadian Armed Forces have a mandate to collect, process and analyze information, and disseminate required intelligence. The main challenge facing the analysts is not a lack of data – in some ways they are drowning in data – but rather managing and making sense of th ...
... The intelligence analysts of the Canadian Armed Forces have a mandate to collect, process and analyze information, and disseminate required intelligence. The main challenge facing the analysts is not a lack of data – in some ways they are drowning in data – but rather managing and making sense of th ...
Artificial Intelligence and Expert Systems
... Knowledge engineering process: (Narrow scope) – Knowledge acquisition: acquisition of knowledge from human experts, books, documents, sensors, or computer files. Knowledge may be specific to the problem domain or to the problem-solving procedures, or it may be general knowledge, or it may be metakno ...
... Knowledge engineering process: (Narrow scope) – Knowledge acquisition: acquisition of knowledge from human experts, books, documents, sensors, or computer files. Knowledge may be specific to the problem domain or to the problem-solving procedures, or it may be general knowledge, or it may be metakno ...
two-column Word document - Unitarian Universalist Association
... Faithful living for us includes discerning the course of action that best reflects our beliefs and values and then acting or choosing accordingly. As inheritors of a faith tradition that honors a wide variety of sources of religious understanding and authority, our big questions are: How do we disce ...
... Faithful living for us includes discerning the course of action that best reflects our beliefs and values and then acting or choosing accordingly. As inheritors of a faith tradition that honors a wide variety of sources of religious understanding and authority, our big questions are: How do we disce ...
Tort Liability for Artificial Intelligence and Expert Systems, 10
... sophisticated symbolic manipulation, an area heretofore the proprietary domain of human beings, we must adapt to the social, legal and ethical consequences. The changes in computer applications seen to date are minuscule compared to those soon to be realized. The past ten years saw amazing evolution ...
... sophisticated symbolic manipulation, an area heretofore the proprietary domain of human beings, we must adapt to the social, legal and ethical consequences. The changes in computer applications seen to date are minuscule compared to those soon to be realized. The past ten years saw amazing evolution ...
Improving Efficiency in Mobile Robot Task Planning through World
... world, which has produced promising results, and also can provide other planning methods with an easy way of including abstraction capabilities. Our HPWA methods are basically procedures that use an existing planner (the so-called embedded planner) at different levels of world abstraction, without c ...
... world, which has produced promising results, and also can provide other planning methods with an easy way of including abstraction capabilities. Our HPWA methods are basically procedures that use an existing planner (the so-called embedded planner) at different levels of world abstraction, without c ...
Affective Motivational Collaboration Theory - WPI
... to the modulation of assessment, selection and the evaluation of options (alternative decisions). For instance, a sad mood may result from an undesired outcome, but it can also lead to increased salience of negative attributes of options in future assessments. Emotion processing and decision-making ...
... to the modulation of assessment, selection and the evaluation of options (alternative decisions). For instance, a sad mood may result from an undesired outcome, but it can also lead to increased salience of negative attributes of options in future assessments. Emotion processing and decision-making ...
Chapter 1 THE INFORMATION AGE IN WHICH YOU LIVE …
... Artificial intelligence (AI) Artificial intelligence types according to Prof. John McCarthy , Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University Logical AI The program decides what to do by inferring that certain actions are appropriate for achieving its goals Search examine large numbers of poss ...
... Artificial intelligence (AI) Artificial intelligence types according to Prof. John McCarthy , Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University Logical AI The program decides what to do by inferring that certain actions are appropriate for achieving its goals Search examine large numbers of poss ...
WHAT WE CHOOSE: ETHICS FOR UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS A
... to be a necessary good for the well-being of the people. — B.R. Ambedkar (1891-1956), Indian jurist, philosopher, writer, orator, and civil rights activist who fought against the Hindu caste system Unitarian Universalism is grounded in the understanding that our actions speak louder than our words o ...
... to be a necessary good for the well-being of the people. — B.R. Ambedkar (1891-1956), Indian jurist, philosopher, writer, orator, and civil rights activist who fought against the Hindu caste system Unitarian Universalism is grounded in the understanding that our actions speak louder than our words o ...
Improving Adjustable Autonomy Strategies for Time
... the decision will either increase the reward for the team or does not have enough information to raise an inconsistency. (vii) Task finished (Finish) - The task has been completed and a reward has been earned. The reward varies based on which decision was executed. Actions - The arrows in Figure 2 r ...
... the decision will either increase the reward for the team or does not have enough information to raise an inconsistency. (vii) Task finished (Finish) - The task has been completed and a reward has been earned. The reward varies based on which decision was executed. Actions - The arrows in Figure 2 r ...