
USC Brain Project Specific Aims
... Michael A Arbib, and Jeffrey Grethe, Editors, 2001, Computing the Brain: A Guide to Neuroinformatics, San Diego: Academic Press (in press) Arbib: CS564 - Brain Theory and Artificial Intelligence, USC, Fall 2001. Lecture 1. Introduction and Overview ...
... Michael A Arbib, and Jeffrey Grethe, Editors, 2001, Computing the Brain: A Guide to Neuroinformatics, San Diego: Academic Press (in press) Arbib: CS564 - Brain Theory and Artificial Intelligence, USC, Fall 2001. Lecture 1. Introduction and Overview ...
Computational Intelligence
... He can share knowledge, findings, discoveries and achievements. He can work in a team and communicate with other team members. He is able to think creatively and use the tools of creative thinking, e.g. brainstorming technique. He developed the ability to think entrepreneurial about implementation o ...
... He can share knowledge, findings, discoveries and achievements. He can work in a team and communicate with other team members. He is able to think creatively and use the tools of creative thinking, e.g. brainstorming technique. He developed the ability to think entrepreneurial about implementation o ...
CSE 471/598 Introduction to AI
... A set of definitions (Figure 1.1) CSE 471/598, CBS 598 H. Liu ...
... A set of definitions (Figure 1.1) CSE 471/598, CBS 598 H. Liu ...
K5054
... 3.1 Artificial Intelligence Techniques In the field of power system operations and planning, very sophisticated computer programs are required and designed in such a way that they could be executed and modified frequently according to any variations. Artificial intelligence (AI) is a powerful knowle ...
... 3.1 Artificial Intelligence Techniques In the field of power system operations and planning, very sophisticated computer programs are required and designed in such a way that they could be executed and modified frequently according to any variations. Artificial intelligence (AI) is a powerful knowle ...
Playing Games Across the Superintelligence Divide
... consisting of tasks which a child could not perform unaided, but which the child could perform partially or with aid. The child seeks out these tasks for self-directed play, as they allow for most efficient learning (Vygotsky 1967). Current game design thinking also emphasizes the role of learning i ...
... consisting of tasks which a child could not perform unaided, but which the child could perform partially or with aid. The child seeks out these tasks for self-directed play, as they allow for most efficient learning (Vygotsky 1967). Current game design thinking also emphasizes the role of learning i ...
From: AAAI Technical Report S-9 -0 . Compilation copyright © 199
... during training courses to help educate users about the powerof CEand its importance. As such, it is a single-user system, with the other membersof the CEteam being simulated by expert systems (agents). The user designs a tower on the screen, according to some requirements,by selecting from, and spe ...
... during training courses to help educate users about the powerof CEand its importance. As such, it is a single-user system, with the other membersof the CEteam being simulated by expert systems (agents). The user designs a tower on the screen, according to some requirements,by selecting from, and spe ...
Engineering Ethics: An Introduction
... – It is usually stated (in part) in a code of ethics. – It focuses on issues that are important in a given profession. – It often takes precedence over personal morality when a professional is in his professional capacity. ...
... – It is usually stated (in part) in a code of ethics. – It focuses on issues that are important in a given profession. – It often takes precedence over personal morality when a professional is in his professional capacity. ...
Chapter 2 Intelligent Agents
... • Same agent would be irrational under different circumstances – once all dirt is cleaned up it will oscillate needlessly back and forth. – If the performance measure includes a penalty of one point for each movement left or right, the agent will fare poorly. – A better agent for this case would do ...
... • Same agent would be irrational under different circumstances – once all dirt is cleaned up it will oscillate needlessly back and forth. – If the performance measure includes a penalty of one point for each movement left or right, the agent will fare poorly. – A better agent for this case would do ...
Diana Hoyos Valdés* Universidad de Caldas
... so clear. On one side, the first four views say there is some kind of MV and it interacts with aesthetic value (AV) in certain sense. The strongest claims about this interrelation seem to come from moralists and ethicists, and then they become more modest. That is, moralists say AV is dependent of M ...
... so clear. On one side, the first four views say there is some kind of MV and it interacts with aesthetic value (AV) in certain sense. The strongest claims about this interrelation seem to come from moralists and ethicists, and then they become more modest. That is, moralists say AV is dependent of M ...
Reports on the 2015 AAAI Workshop Series
... several events were held at AAAI-15 including a debate on the proposed UN ban on lethal autonomous weapons and this workshop. Topics covered at the workshop included architectures for endowing autonomous agents with ethics, prospects for the future of AI, and experiments around AI and ethics. One hi ...
... several events were held at AAAI-15 including a debate on the proposed UN ban on lethal autonomous weapons and this workshop. Topics covered at the workshop included architectures for endowing autonomous agents with ethics, prospects for the future of AI, and experiments around AI and ethics. One hi ...
IACAP Newsletter 2011-1 - International Association for Computing
... Over time the projects have developed from applications of computer modeling and chaos theory to issues in infinite-value logic and paradox, to explorations by way of cellular automata of issues of egoism and altruism in social and political philosophy, to modeling the emergence of semantics and pra ...
... Over time the projects have developed from applications of computer modeling and chaos theory to issues in infinite-value logic and paradox, to explorations by way of cellular automata of issues of egoism and altruism in social and political philosophy, to modeling the emergence of semantics and pra ...
MS PowerPoint 97 format
... – Simulated annealing: can be defined as genetic algorithm • Selection, mutation only • Simple SA: single-point population (serial trajectory) • More on this next week ...
... – Simulated annealing: can be defined as genetic algorithm • Selection, mutation only • Simple SA: single-point population (serial trajectory) • More on this next week ...
Chapter 02 for Neuro-Fuzzy and Soft Computing
... SC Constituants and Conventional AI (1) “SC is an emerging approach to computing which parallel the remarkable ability of the human mind to reason and learn in a environment of uncertainty and imprecision” [Lotfi A. ...
... SC Constituants and Conventional AI (1) “SC is an emerging approach to computing which parallel the remarkable ability of the human mind to reason and learn in a environment of uncertainty and imprecision” [Lotfi A. ...
experience based diagnostics and condition based maintenance
... Intelligent agent technology to identify expertise In any organization most skills are undertaken by employees, but the problem is often to find the persons with the specific knowledge. Using Intelligent Agent Technology it is possible to identify the needed expertise thus reduce consultancy costs a ...
... Intelligent agent technology to identify expertise In any organization most skills are undertaken by employees, but the problem is often to find the persons with the specific knowledge. Using Intelligent Agent Technology it is possible to identify the needed expertise thus reduce consultancy costs a ...
Reinforcement Learning and the Reward Engineering Principle
... may engineer the environment to make rewards assignments more reliable, perhaps even removing a human from the loop altogether and giving rewards via an automatic mechanism. Call this type of effort reward engineering; the reinforcement learning agent’s goal is not being changed, but the environment ...
... may engineer the environment to make rewards assignments more reliable, perhaps even removing a human from the loop altogether and giving rewards via an automatic mechanism. Call this type of effort reward engineering; the reinforcement learning agent’s goal is not being changed, but the environment ...
Verification, Validation and Evaluation of Expert Systems in Order to
... 1. Introduction Well known software researchers have given different definitions of expert systems, but there was one thing they all agreed on: that knowledge based systems are meant to function as systems able to solve specific intelligent activities that human experts used to do. There was also co ...
... 1. Introduction Well known software researchers have given different definitions of expert systems, but there was one thing they all agreed on: that knowledge based systems are meant to function as systems able to solve specific intelligent activities that human experts used to do. There was also co ...
coppin chapter 19
... knowledge and the ability to use that knowledge to solve its problems more efficiently. Intelligent agents are often able to learn, and have other properties that we will look at in the following slides. ...
... knowledge and the ability to use that knowledge to solve its problems more efficiently. Intelligent agents are often able to learn, and have other properties that we will look at in the following slides. ...
A Unified Framework for Pattern Recognition, Image Processing
... overview of the framework of current image understanding research from the points of view of knowledge level, information level and complexity. Since a general purpose computer vision system must be capable of recognizing 3-D objects, the paper attempts to define the 3-D object recognition problem, ...
... overview of the framework of current image understanding research from the points of view of knowledge level, information level and complexity. Since a general purpose computer vision system must be capable of recognizing 3-D objects, the paper attempts to define the 3-D object recognition problem, ...
Is there a future for AI without representation?
... that there are arguments which have shown a fundamental flaw in all present AI, particularly that its symbols do not refer or represent, that they are not “grounded”, as one now says (see Harnad 1990; Preston and Bishop 2002; Searle 1980). This lack of ‘mental representation’ is considered fatal for ...
... that there are arguments which have shown a fundamental flaw in all present AI, particularly that its symbols do not refer or represent, that they are not “grounded”, as one now says (see Harnad 1990; Preston and Bishop 2002; Searle 1980). This lack of ‘mental representation’ is considered fatal for ...
S04601119125
... compared with General recognition method. From this we can conclude that neural network technique is better than General Method of recognition. In this, I have shown the results based on neural network technique and comparison between neural network method & general method. Keywords - Hand Gesture, ...
... compared with General recognition method. From this we can conclude that neural network technique is better than General Method of recognition. In this, I have shown the results based on neural network technique and comparison between neural network method & general method. Keywords - Hand Gesture, ...
Ethics in Health Care - Philadelphia University
... Medical ethics refers Critical Care – chiefly to the rules of etiquette adopted by the medical profession to regulate professional conduct with each other, – but also towards their individual patients – and towards society, – and includes considerations of the motives behind that conduct. Need for ...
... Medical ethics refers Critical Care – chiefly to the rules of etiquette adopted by the medical profession to regulate professional conduct with each other, – but also towards their individual patients – and towards society, – and includes considerations of the motives behind that conduct. Need for ...
Unit 1: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence
... chemical signals which precede certain types of cancer (Nature, 2004) Is this natural or artificial? ...
... chemical signals which precede certain types of cancer (Nature, 2004) Is this natural or artificial? ...
AI Magazine - Intelligent and Mobile Agents Research Group
... that is coupled with an increased reliance on this data by health practitioners and patients. The main boundaries to fully leveraging the data are its sophisticated management, analysis, and use of results. AI techniques are very well suited to expand these boundaries, thus facilitating advances in ...
... that is coupled with an increased reliance on this data by health practitioners and patients. The main boundaries to fully leveraging the data are its sophisticated management, analysis, and use of results. AI techniques are very well suited to expand these boundaries, thus facilitating advances in ...
Adapting to Human Game Play - Computer Science and Software
... Other relevant research by Ponsen et al [10], [11], [12] extends the dynamic scripting method developed by Pieter Spronck et al [13], [14], [15] for RTS games. The dynamic scripting is used to change the strategy rules (the script) for an opponent during game play. Rules that perform well in a parti ...
... Other relevant research by Ponsen et al [10], [11], [12] extends the dynamic scripting method developed by Pieter Spronck et al [13], [14], [15] for RTS games. The dynamic scripting is used to change the strategy rules (the script) for an opponent during game play. Rules that perform well in a parti ...
Toward a Theory of Intelligence - Boston College Computer Science
... with the right program for the tape (110)0*. But clearly there is a Zog-fa that generates this tape too (by our lemma). ■ Corollary 1.1. For any Zog-fa a recursive-computing learner can acquire, there are infinitely many Zog-fa’s it cannot. In the above case, it cannot acquire any of the Zog-fa’s wh ...
... with the right program for the tape (110)0*. But clearly there is a Zog-fa that generates this tape too (by our lemma). ■ Corollary 1.1. For any Zog-fa a recursive-computing learner can acquire, there are infinitely many Zog-fa’s it cannot. In the above case, it cannot acquire any of the Zog-fa’s wh ...