
CS7075sy_FA_2016 - Kennesaw State University
... The primary objective of this course is to provide an introduction to the basic principles and applications of Artificial Intelligence. Programming assignments are used to help clarify basic concepts. The emphasis of the course is on teaching the fundamentals, and not on providing a mastery of speci ...
... The primary objective of this course is to provide an introduction to the basic principles and applications of Artificial Intelligence. Programming assignments are used to help clarify basic concepts. The emphasis of the course is on teaching the fundamentals, and not on providing a mastery of speci ...
sb.css.onlinelect.v3 - Minds & Machines Home
... the Turing Limit. Then all chains of human reasoning (e.g., proofs) are identical to some chain of reasoning expressed in first-order logic. But there are many chains of human reasoning in infinitary logics, and we know that such chains in infinitary logic cannot possibly be expressed in first-order ...
... the Turing Limit. Then all chains of human reasoning (e.g., proofs) are identical to some chain of reasoning expressed in first-order logic. But there are many chains of human reasoning in infinitary logics, and we know that such chains in infinitary logic cannot possibly be expressed in first-order ...
Expert systems
... • Artificial intelligence systems form a broad and diverse set of systems that can replicate human decision making for certain types of well-defined problems. – Define the term artificial intelligence and state the objective of developing artificial intelligence systems. – List the characteristics o ...
... • Artificial intelligence systems form a broad and diverse set of systems that can replicate human decision making for certain types of well-defined problems. – Define the term artificial intelligence and state the objective of developing artificial intelligence systems. – List the characteristics o ...
Why Study Engineering Ethics? - CS/ECE 252
... 1.to accept responsibility in making decisions consistent with the safety, health and welfare of the public, and to disclose promptly factors that might endanger the public or the environment; 2.to avoid real or perceived conflicts of interest whenever possible, and to disclose them to affected part ...
... 1.to accept responsibility in making decisions consistent with the safety, health and welfare of the public, and to disclose promptly factors that might endanger the public or the environment; 2.to avoid real or perceived conflicts of interest whenever possible, and to disclose them to affected part ...
Ethics in Dentistry:
... arise simply because we live together and interact. They are not grounded in Kant or Mill, or rights. Examples of such obligations: “Promises create obligations of fidelity;” “Wrongful actions create obligations of reparation.” The prima facie nature of principles: A prima facie duty is one that is ...
... arise simply because we live together and interact. They are not grounded in Kant or Mill, or rights. Examples of such obligations: “Promises create obligations of fidelity;” “Wrongful actions create obligations of reparation.” The prima facie nature of principles: A prima facie duty is one that is ...
Ethics: A Brief Overview
... “Teaser” for next class… If animals have a different purpose from humans, does this change the “rules” for research? ...
... “Teaser” for next class… If animals have a different purpose from humans, does this change the “rules” for research? ...
Metody Inteligencji Obliczeniowej
... Nicolaus Copernicus University, Toruń, Poland Google: W. Duch ICONIP’08 Panel Discussion ...
... Nicolaus Copernicus University, Toruń, Poland Google: W. Duch ICONIP’08 Panel Discussion ...
Limitations and Risks of Machine Ethics Miles Brundage
... ethics as one among multiple strategies for ensuring positive social outcomes from the creation of such machines. Yudkowsky (2001), for example, argues that failing to develop a sufficiently well-formulated computational instantiation of morality will result in catastrophic outcomes from developing ...
... ethics as one among multiple strategies for ensuring positive social outcomes from the creation of such machines. Yudkowsky (2001), for example, argues that failing to develop a sufficiently well-formulated computational instantiation of morality will result in catastrophic outcomes from developing ...
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
... a single word can require a great deal of knowledge • Syntax: the ‘rules’ of a language, definitions of words • Semantics: the underlying meanings ...
... a single word can require a great deal of knowledge • Syntax: the ‘rules’ of a language, definitions of words • Semantics: the underlying meanings ...
Artificial Intelligence
... Is real life described by discrete rules, or not? Can we build a UTM from living components? Can a machine do anything a human can do? Can human intelligence be simulated by a machine? ...
... Is real life described by discrete rules, or not? Can we build a UTM from living components? Can a machine do anything a human can do? Can human intelligence be simulated by a machine? ...
Ethics
... For leaders to be effective in a principlesbased organization, they must routinely make the ethical component of their own decision-making explicit. Leaders must be able to point to key organizational decisions and explain in detail how they uphold the organization’s principles. ...
... For leaders to be effective in a principlesbased organization, they must routinely make the ethical component of their own decision-making explicit. Leaders must be able to point to key organizational decisions and explain in detail how they uphold the organization’s principles. ...
What is Artificial Intelligence?
... “Chess is the Drosophila of artificial intelligence. However, computer chess has developed much as genetics might have if the geneticists had concentrated their efforts starting in 1910 on breeding racing Drosophila. We would have some science, but mainly we would have very fast fruit flies.” ...
... “Chess is the Drosophila of artificial intelligence. However, computer chess has developed much as genetics might have if the geneticists had concentrated their efforts starting in 1910 on breeding racing Drosophila. We would have some science, but mainly we would have very fast fruit flies.” ...
Nonconsequentialist Theories of Morality
... Universalizability the important part The Categorical Imperative Act is immoral if the rule that would authorize it cannot be made into a rule for all humans Practical Imperative No human should be thought of or used for another’s end Duty Rather Than Inclination Must act on sense of duty ...
... Universalizability the important part The Categorical Imperative Act is immoral if the rule that would authorize it cannot be made into a rule for all humans Practical Imperative No human should be thought of or used for another’s end Duty Rather Than Inclination Must act on sense of duty ...
Support Vector Machines - Robotics Group of Bogazici University
... • An individual one-class SVM is created for each color. • With an extremely low υ, and large γ the boundary formed by the desicion function contains (1- υ) of the training points • Advantage: SVM simultaneously removes the outliers • SVM can be used in to situations – Set up phase at a competion – ...
... • An individual one-class SVM is created for each color. • With an extremely low υ, and large γ the boundary formed by the desicion function contains (1- υ) of the training points • Advantage: SVM simultaneously removes the outliers • SVM can be used in to situations – Set up phase at a competion – ...
Moral Enhancement and the Duty to Eliminate Evildoing
... argument rests on the moral imperative to respect the separateness of persons and on the value of human freedom and autonomy. Second, I consider two alternatives regarding mandatory moral enhancement in society: universal enhancement and selective enhancement of specific groups like public officehol ...
... argument rests on the moral imperative to respect the separateness of persons and on the value of human freedom and autonomy. Second, I consider two alternatives regarding mandatory moral enhancement in society: universal enhancement and selective enhancement of specific groups like public officehol ...
Turing++ Questions: A Test for the Science of (Human) Intelligence
... no cars are permitted to drive down it; we can distinguish between the pants that are for sale and the pants that people are wearing. We, but not a computer program, could generate a narrative about the scene. It’s a fairly warm, sunny day at a weekend market. The people surrounding the stroller are ...
... no cars are permitted to drive down it; we can distinguish between the pants that are for sale and the pants that people are wearing. We, but not a computer program, could generate a narrative about the scene. It’s a fairly warm, sunny day at a weekend market. The people surrounding the stroller are ...
machine learning and artificial neural networks for face
... C = Convolutional layer M = Max-pooling layer (makes the output of convolutional networks more robust to translations) L = Locally connected layer F = Fully connected layer • More than 120M parameters to learn! ...
... C = Convolutional layer M = Max-pooling layer (makes the output of convolutional networks more robust to translations) L = Locally connected layer F = Fully connected layer • More than 120M parameters to learn! ...
Notes 1: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence
... For any given class of environments and tasks, we seek the agent (or class of agents) with the best performance ...
... For any given class of environments and tasks, we seek the agent (or class of agents) with the best performance ...
Intelligence Without Reason
... intelligence. Furthermore, without those aspects the va lidity of the traditional Artificial Intelligence approaches comes into question. I will also argue that much of the landmark work on thought has been influenced by the technological constraints of the available computers, and thereafter these ...
... intelligence. Furthermore, without those aspects the va lidity of the traditional Artificial Intelligence approaches comes into question. I will also argue that much of the landmark work on thought has been influenced by the technological constraints of the available computers, and thereafter these ...
Improving the Believability of Non
... techniques, such as a genetic algorithm, within the agent’s decision-making process may provide an increased believability of the agent over those utilizing more traditional video game artificial intelligence approaches was established. In order to test this hypothesis, a simulator was developed wit ...
... techniques, such as a genetic algorithm, within the agent’s decision-making process may provide an increased believability of the agent over those utilizing more traditional video game artificial intelligence approaches was established. In order to test this hypothesis, a simulator was developed wit ...
Morals
... • Animals members of our community • If we treat them badly we display wrong character traits • Gives us no method for arguing for moral considerability or establishing moral significance ...
... • Animals members of our community • If we treat them badly we display wrong character traits • Gives us no method for arguing for moral considerability or establishing moral significance ...
Preface
... Trading agents have become a prominent application area of artificial intelligence because of their potential for transforming electronic commerce, and because they present a stiff challenge to models of rational decision-making. A wide variety of trading scenarios and agent approaches have been stu ...
... Trading agents have become a prominent application area of artificial intelligence because of their potential for transforming electronic commerce, and because they present a stiff challenge to models of rational decision-making. A wide variety of trading scenarios and agent approaches have been stu ...