
Argumentation Theory in the Field: An Empirical Study of
... (Dung, 1995) and expand upon them in some way. One more notion, which was not addressed in (Dung, 1995), Support, has been increasingly gaining attention (Boella et al., 2010). Overall, the same principals and ideas have prevailed for many years. All of these models and semantics try to provide a no ...
... (Dung, 1995) and expand upon them in some way. One more notion, which was not addressed in (Dung, 1995), Support, has been increasingly gaining attention (Boella et al., 2010). Overall, the same principals and ideas have prevailed for many years. All of these models and semantics try to provide a no ...
View CV - Learning Research and Development Center (LRDC)
... UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Courses: Artificial Intelligence and Law Seminar, Artificial Intelligence and Law Practicum, Intellectual Property, Cyberspace and Law, Computers and Law, Information Age Torts Seminar, Commercial Paper. Developed practicum entitled “Artificial Int ...
... UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Courses: Artificial Intelligence and Law Seminar, Artificial Intelligence and Law Practicum, Intellectual Property, Cyberspace and Law, Computers and Law, Information Age Torts Seminar, Commercial Paper. Developed practicum entitled “Artificial Int ...
BNAIC05.pdf
... relevance approach[2]. However, our main idea is: given a selection function, which can be defined on the syntactic or semantic relevance, we select some consistent sub-theory from an inconsistent ontology. Then we apply standard reasoning on the selected sub-theory to find meaningful answers. If a ...
... relevance approach[2]. However, our main idea is: given a selection function, which can be defined on the syntactic or semantic relevance, we select some consistent sub-theory from an inconsistent ontology. Then we apply standard reasoning on the selected sub-theory to find meaningful answers. If a ...
Computational Creativity, Concept Invention, and General
... XIII]). While in GT the resulting theory can be evaluated according to a set of criteria including fit to data, predictive and explanatory power, logical consistency, clarity and scope, due to the preliminary nature of our work, we do not carry out evaluation at this stage. ...
... XIII]). While in GT the resulting theory can be evaluated according to a set of criteria including fit to data, predictive and explanatory power, logical consistency, clarity and scope, due to the preliminary nature of our work, we do not carry out evaluation at this stage. ...
On John McCarthy`s 80th Birthday, in Honor of his Contributions
... Fifty years ago, John McCarthy embarked on a bold and unique plan to achieve human-level intelligence in computers. It was not his dream of an intelligent computer that was unique, or even first: Alan Turing (Turing 1950) had envisioned a computer that could converse intelligently with humans back i ...
... Fifty years ago, John McCarthy embarked on a bold and unique plan to achieve human-level intelligence in computers. It was not his dream of an intelligent computer that was unique, or even first: Alan Turing (Turing 1950) had envisioned a computer that could converse intelligently with humans back i ...
The Rise of Granular Computing - University of Regina
... synergy between AI and Brain Sciences will yield profound advances in our understanding of intelligence over the coming decade, fundamentally changing the nature of our field.” In their white paper on a research map for explaining human intelligence, Berwick et al. [20] write, “We expect that develo ...
... synergy between AI and Brain Sciences will yield profound advances in our understanding of intelligence over the coming decade, fundamentally changing the nature of our field.” In their white paper on a research map for explaining human intelligence, Berwick et al. [20] write, “We expect that develo ...
myworld: an agent-oriented testbed for distributed artificial intelligence
... e-mail: mikew@sun.com.mmu.ac.uk, tel: (+44 61) 247 1531, fax: (+44 61) 247 1483. ...
... e-mail: mikew@sun.com.mmu.ac.uk, tel: (+44 61) 247 1531, fax: (+44 61) 247 1483. ...
FraMoTEC: A Framework for Modular Task-Environment
... In essence, most of the evaluation methods currently at our disposal leave out important aspects of intelligence, such as evaluating a system’s ability to learn. Evaluation methods should evaluate controllers without changing the task-environment so that the performance of the controller performing ...
... In essence, most of the evaluation methods currently at our disposal leave out important aspects of intelligence, such as evaluating a system’s ability to learn. Evaluation methods should evaluate controllers without changing the task-environment so that the performance of the controller performing ...
Spring Symposium Series - Association for the Advancement of
... learned, and which learning strategies are appropriate in a given context. This focusing process may take place at any decision point during learning—-for example, when determining what to learn, selecting a bias, pruning the space of theories to be considered, or generating experiments for data gat ...
... learned, and which learning strategies are appropriate in a given context. This focusing process may take place at any decision point during learning—-for example, when determining what to learn, selecting a bias, pruning the space of theories to be considered, or generating experiments for data gat ...
Perception Processing for General Intelligence
... (b) arise via a relatively simple, thin layer on top of subsymbolic intelligence, that merely applies subsymbolic intelligence in a slightly different way 3. Symbolic and subsymbolic aspects of intelligence are best considered as different subsystems, which (a) have a significant degree of independe ...
... (b) arise via a relatively simple, thin layer on top of subsymbolic intelligence, that merely applies subsymbolic intelligence in a slightly different way 3. Symbolic and subsymbolic aspects of intelligence are best considered as different subsystems, which (a) have a significant degree of independe ...
MEETING FLORIDI`S CHALLENGE TO ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
... Of course, anyone convinced not only of AI's ability to eventually create creatures that appear to have minds but also of its ability to produce artificial minds, will want to show that Floridi's challenge can be surmounted. One of the remarkable aspects of his article is that it targets both "weak" ...
... Of course, anyone convinced not only of AI's ability to eventually create creatures that appear to have minds but also of its ability to produce artificial minds, will want to show that Floridi's challenge can be surmounted. One of the remarkable aspects of his article is that it targets both "weak" ...
A Robot Exploration and Mapping Strategy Based on a Semantic
... clearly captured by the relationships between the three representations in the spatial semantic hierarchy. Another qualitative method for place definition and navigation based on visual landmark recognition has been proposed by Levitt et al. [1987]. They discuss the weakness of traditional navigatio ...
... clearly captured by the relationships between the three representations in the spatial semantic hierarchy. Another qualitative method for place definition and navigation based on visual landmark recognition has been proposed by Levitt et al. [1987]. They discuss the weakness of traditional navigatio ...
Press Release Konica Minolta showcases Artificial Intelligence
... Konica Minolta is supporting the AI Summit, the world’s foremost event covering the practical implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) for enterprise organisations and solutions that are transforming business productivity. Taking place in San Francisco, 28 – 29 September, more than 600 business ...
... Konica Minolta is supporting the AI Summit, the world’s foremost event covering the practical implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) for enterprise organisations and solutions that are transforming business productivity. Taking place in San Francisco, 28 – 29 September, more than 600 business ...
i think, therefore i invent: creative computers and the future of patent
... could and should be patentable. 7 It argues that computers can be inventors because although AI would not be motivated to invent by the prospect of a patent, computer inventorship would incentivize the development of creative machines. 8 In turn, this would lead to new scientific advances. Beyond in ...
... could and should be patentable. 7 It argues that computers can be inventors because although AI would not be motivated to invent by the prospect of a patent, computer inventorship would incentivize the development of creative machines. 8 In turn, this would lead to new scientific advances. Beyond in ...
Policy Communication for Coordination with Unknown Teammates
... intentions given relatively complex domains with thousands or millions of states is infeasible for practical application. As Barrett et al. (Barrett, Stone, and Kraus 2011) observed, ad hoc agents can often collaborate effectively when only observing the behavior of an unknown team in a comparativel ...
... intentions given relatively complex domains with thousands or millions of states is infeasible for practical application. As Barrett et al. (Barrett, Stone, and Kraus 2011) observed, ad hoc agents can often collaborate effectively when only observing the behavior of an unknown team in a comparativel ...
On Three Defenses of Sentimentalism
... 8, para. 7). Thus, Hume claims the existence of “the common principles of human nature” (T 3.2.6.9; cf. EPM 9.64). According to Hume, our moral sentiments rest on this unchangeable human nature. He says, “the sentiments of morality…are so rooted in our constitution and temper, that without entirely ...
... 8, para. 7). Thus, Hume claims the existence of “the common principles of human nature” (T 3.2.6.9; cf. EPM 9.64). According to Hume, our moral sentiments rest on this unchangeable human nature. He says, “the sentiments of morality…are so rooted in our constitution and temper, that without entirely ...
Artificial Intelligence and Expert Systems
... heuristic methods, procedures, and relationships Knowledge is also information organized and analyzed for understanding and applicable to problem solving or decision making Knowledge base - the collection of knowledge related to a problem (or opportunity) used in an AI system Typically limited in so ...
... heuristic methods, procedures, and relationships Knowledge is also information organized and analyzed for understanding and applicable to problem solving or decision making Knowledge base - the collection of knowledge related to a problem (or opportunity) used in an AI system Typically limited in so ...
Universal Artificial Intelligence
... On the Foundations of Artificial Intelligence • Example: Algorithm/complexity theory: The goal is to find fast algorithms solving problems and to show lower bounds on their computation time. Everything is rigorously defined: algorithm, Turing machine, problem classes, computation time, ... • Most di ...
... On the Foundations of Artificial Intelligence • Example: Algorithm/complexity theory: The goal is to find fast algorithms solving problems and to show lower bounds on their computation time. Everything is rigorously defined: algorithm, Turing machine, problem classes, computation time, ... • Most di ...
H - Computer Science | SIU
... goes back thousands of years when words like “probably”, “likely”, “maybe”, “perhaps” and “possibly” were introduced into spoken languages. However, the mathematical theory of probability was formulated only in the 17th century. ...
... goes back thousands of years when words like “probably”, “likely”, “maybe”, “perhaps” and “possibly” were introduced into spoken languages. However, the mathematical theory of probability was formulated only in the 17th century. ...
CMSC 372 Artificial Intelligence
... • An agent should strive to "do the right thing", based on what it can perceive and the actions it can perform. The right action is the one that will cause the agent to be most successful • Performance measure: An objective criterion for success of an agent's behavior • E.g., performance measure of ...
... • An agent should strive to "do the right thing", based on what it can perceive and the actions it can perform. The right action is the one that will cause the agent to be most successful • Performance measure: An objective criterion for success of an agent's behavior • E.g., performance measure of ...
Lebeltel2000
... comprises the steps in the incremental development of a complex robot program. The advantages and drawbacks of this approach are discussed along with these different experiments and summed up as a conclusion. These different robotics programs may be seen as an illustration of probabilistic programmi ...
... comprises the steps in the incremental development of a complex robot program. The advantages and drawbacks of this approach are discussed along with these different experiments and summed up as a conclusion. These different robotics programs may be seen as an illustration of probabilistic programmi ...
View PDF - Boston College Law Review
... could and should be patentable. 7 It argues that computers can be inventors because although AI would not be motivated to invent by the prospect of a patent, computer inventorship would incentivize the development of creative machines. 8 In turn, this would lead to new scientific advances. Beyond in ...
... could and should be patentable. 7 It argues that computers can be inventors because although AI would not be motivated to invent by the prospect of a patent, computer inventorship would incentivize the development of creative machines. 8 In turn, this would lead to new scientific advances. Beyond in ...