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CS 332: Introduction to AI Class Hour: Section 1: MWF 1:10PM - 2:00PM. Hyer 210 A little bit about the instructor Associate professor at UWW Graduated from the University of Connecticut (05 Class), Ph.D in Computer Science and Engineering • Master of Computer Science from UW-Milwaukee (96-99) • Bachelor of Science from Hanoi University of Technology (86-91) A little bit about the instructor Research Experience: AI, User Modeling, Information Retrieval, Decision Theory, Collaborative Filtering, Human Factors Teaching Experience: MCS 231, 220, COMPSCI 172, 173, 222, 181, 271, 322, 381 at UWW Introductory courses at UOP and Devry TA for Computer Architecture, OO Design, Compiler, Artificial Intelligence Contact information [email protected] (fastest way to contact me) MG 106 Office Hours: 9am – 10:45am MWF, noon – 1pm W, 9-10am online on skype (Tuesday) or by appointment 262 472 5170 Course Objectives Given a basic Artificial Intelligence(AI) problem such as search, gaming, planning, machine learning, understand the theory, and implement algorithms being used to solve this problem. Given a real world problem, be able to identify the parts in which AI techniques can be applied. Technology Requirement Either Java Development Kit (JDK) Or C++ (Linux version). Weka (machine learning): http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/ml/weka/ Genie/Smile (free download for Bayesian networks) from http://genie.sis.pitt.edu/ Book requirement Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach (3rd Edition) (Prentice Hall Series in Artificial Intelligence). 2009. ISBN: 0136042597 Evaluation GRADABLE Percentage 4 Projects 50% 10 Homeworks 25% Midterm exam 10% Final exam 15% Total 100% Evaluation Letter Letter Percentage Grade Grade Percentage A 94 to 100% A- 90 to 93% B+ 87 to 89% B 84 to 86% B- 80 to 83% C+ 77 to 79% C 74 to 76% C- 70 to 73% D+ 67 to 69% D 64 to 66% D- 60 to 63% F Less than 60% What is Artificial Intelligence? Main topics What is AI? A brief history. The State of the Art. What is AI http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eq-AHmD8xz0 Discussion AI systems are …. Choose all that best describe AI systems: Systems that think like humans Systems that think rationally Systems that act like humans Systems that act rationally Systems that make decisions for humans Systems that play with humans Acting humanly Turing (1950) “Computing machinery and intelligence": Can machines think?“ “Can machines behave intelligently?” Operational test for intelligent behavior: the Imitation Game http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jq0ELhpKevY Predicted that by 2000, a machine might have a 30% chance of fooling a lay person for 5 minutes Thinking humanly 1960s “cognitive revolution": information-processing psychology replaced prevailing orthodoxy of behaviorism. Requires scientic theories of internal activities of the brain What level of abstraction? “Knowledge" or “circuits"? How to validate? Requires 1) Predicting and testing behavior of human subjects (top-down) or 2) Direct identification from neurological data (bottom-up) Both share with AI the following characteristic: the available theories do not explain (or engender) anything resembling human-level general intelligence Thinking rationally: Laws of Thought Normative (or prescriptive) rather than descriptive Direct line through mathematics and philosophy to modern AI Problems: 1) Not all intelligent behavior is mediated by logical deliberation 2) What is the purpose of thinking? What thoughts should I have out of all the thoughts (logical or otherwise) that I could have? Acting rationally Rational behavior: doing the right thing (The right thing: that which is expected to maximize goal achievement, given the available information) Doesn't necessarily involve but thinking should be in the service of rational action Supporting fields Philosophy logic, methods of reasoning, mind as physical system, foundations of learning, language, rationality Mathematics formal representation and proof algorithms, computation, (un)decidability, (in)tractability, probability Psychology adaptation, phenomena of perception and motor control, experimental techniques (psychophysics, etc.) Economics formal theory of rational decisions Linguistics knowledge representation, grammar Neuroscience plastic physical substrate for mental activity Control theory homeostatic systems, stability, simple optimal agent designs Control theory homeostatic systems, stability, simple optimal agent designs History of AI 1943 McCulloch & Pitts: Boolean circuit model of brain 1950 Turing's “Computing Machinery and Intelligence“ 1950s Early AI programs, including Samuel's checkers program, Newell & Simon's Logic Theorist, Gelernter's Geometry Engine 1956 Dartmouth meeting: Articial Intelligence" adopted 1965 Robinson's complete algorithm for logical reasoning 1966-74 AI discovers computational complexity Neural network research almost disappears 1969-79 Early development of knowledge-based systems 1980-88 Expert systems industry booms 1988-93 Expert systems industry busts: \AI Winter" 1985-95 Neural networks return to popularity 1988 Resurgence of probability; general increase in technical depth, Nouvelle AI": ALife, GAs, soft computing 1995: Agents, agents, everywhere : : : 2003: Human-level AI back on the agenda State of the art Which of the following can be done at present? Play a decent game of table tennis Drive safely along a curving mountain road Drive safely through streets of a closed Air Force base Buy a week's worth of groceries at Berkeley Bowl Play a decent game of bridge Discover and prove a new mathematical theorem Design and execute a research program in molecular biology State of the art Which of the following can be done at present? Play a decent game of table tennis Drive safely along a curving mountain road Drive safely through streets of a closed Air Force base Buy a week's worth of groceries at Berkeley Bowl (a real grocery store) Play a decent game of bridge Discover and prove a new mathematical theorem Design and execute a research program in molecular biology Discussion To what extend are the following computer systems instances of artificial intelligence Supermarket bar code scanners Web search engines Voice-activated telephone menus Internet routing algorithms that respond dynamically to the state of the network Discussion “Sure computers cannot be intelligent – they can only do what their programmers tell them.” Is the latter statement true and does it imply the former?