
• What are intelligent agents? • What are the features of an intelligent
... Intelligent software agents are defined as being a software program that can perform specific tasks for a user and possesses a degree of intelligence that permits it to perform parts of its tasks autonomous in a useful manner. What is intelligence that refers to software agents? ...
... Intelligent software agents are defined as being a software program that can perform specific tasks for a user and possesses a degree of intelligence that permits it to perform parts of its tasks autonomous in a useful manner. What is intelligence that refers to software agents? ...
A guide for newsrooms in the age of smart machines
... Consider the journalistic work involved in the Panama Papers. Sifting through millions of documents is tedious and can be easily automated, but no machine can look at a link between two organizations, think “that’s odd,” make the appropriate calls, speak with the right people and do the investigativ ...
... Consider the journalistic work involved in the Panama Papers. Sifting through millions of documents is tedious and can be easily automated, but no machine can look at a link between two organizations, think “that’s odd,” make the appropriate calls, speak with the right people and do the investigativ ...
final final final
... of the theorists of the domain. Dealing with this subject, Kathy Fitzpatrick and Candace Gauthier suggest that the charges of unethical conduct against those working in public relations result, at least partially, from a misunderstanding. It consists in confounding the PR professionals’ own values a ...
... of the theorists of the domain. Dealing with this subject, Kathy Fitzpatrick and Candace Gauthier suggest that the charges of unethical conduct against those working in public relations result, at least partially, from a misunderstanding. It consists in confounding the PR professionals’ own values a ...
Turing Tests with Turing Machines
... problem than artificial intelligence as defined by Turing’s”. Nonetheless, the fact that there is a connection between compression and intelligence does not mean that intelligence can be just defined as compression ability (see, e.g., [6] for a full discussion on this). Legg and Hutter [21] would la ...
... problem than artificial intelligence as defined by Turing’s”. Nonetheless, the fact that there is a connection between compression and intelligence does not mean that intelligence can be just defined as compression ability (see, e.g., [6] for a full discussion on this). Legg and Hutter [21] would la ...
The calculus of self-modifiable algorithms: planning, scheduling and
... The Calculus of Self-Modifiable Algorithms (CSA), as described in [3-6], was designed to be a universal theory for intelligent and parallel systems, integrating various styles of programming and applied in different domains of future generation computers. The use of artificial intelligence in future ...
... The Calculus of Self-Modifiable Algorithms (CSA), as described in [3-6], was designed to be a universal theory for intelligent and parallel systems, integrating various styles of programming and applied in different domains of future generation computers. The use of artificial intelligence in future ...
Information Technology Software
... Most major decisions in medium and large organizations are made by groups Conflicting objectives are common Variable size People from different departments People from different organizations The group decision making process can be very ...
... Most major decisions in medium and large organizations are made by groups Conflicting objectives are common Variable size People from different departments People from different organizations The group decision making process can be very ...
Extending Universal Intelligence Models with Formal Notion
... gives the best model via minimization of the model complexity l(µ) and the model “precision” K(α | µ)=l(δ), where δ describes deviations of the data α from the model µ. This equation becomes similar to the Bayesian rule, if one assumes –log2P(µ)=l(µ) and –log2P(α | µ)=K(α | µ). The MDL principle dif ...
... gives the best model via minimization of the model complexity l(µ) and the model “precision” K(α | µ)=l(δ), where δ describes deviations of the data α from the model µ. This equation becomes similar to the Bayesian rule, if one assumes –log2P(µ)=l(µ) and –log2P(α | µ)=K(α | µ). The MDL principle dif ...
Lectures 14-15: Deontological & Consequential Ethics
... irrational is to be inhuman. To be sure, there are perfect and imperfect duties. Actions are characterized as perfect because they follow directly from an application of the universalization of the Categorical Imperative in contrast to imperfect duties that follow from CI only after considering othe ...
... irrational is to be inhuman. To be sure, there are perfect and imperfect duties. Actions are characterized as perfect because they follow directly from an application of the universalization of the Categorical Imperative in contrast to imperfect duties that follow from CI only after considering othe ...
Lectures 6-7 Deontological & Consequential Ethics
... irrational is to be inhuman. To be sure, there are perfect and imperfect duties. Actions are characterized as perfect because they follow directly from an application of the universalization of the Categorical Imperative in contrast to imperfect duties that follow from CI only after considering othe ...
... irrational is to be inhuman. To be sure, there are perfect and imperfect duties. Actions are characterized as perfect because they follow directly from an application of the universalization of the Categorical Imperative in contrast to imperfect duties that follow from CI only after considering othe ...
Curriculum vitae
... was concurrent with, and independent of the work at MIT at that time (by Tom Malone) but to my knowledge there was no other work on this topic at that time or before. Three-level Architecture The article (13) and related articles by some of my students are among the very first publications on the top ...
... was concurrent with, and independent of the work at MIT at that time (by Tom Malone) but to my knowledge there was no other work on this topic at that time or before. Three-level Architecture The article (13) and related articles by some of my students are among the very first publications on the top ...
Is it Ethical?
... There is no universally agreed upon definition of “morality” among ethicists and philosophers. So we could say that morality is a system of rules for guiding human conduct and principles for evaluating those rules. The key words are: ...
... There is no universally agreed upon definition of “morality” among ethicists and philosophers. So we could say that morality is a system of rules for guiding human conduct and principles for evaluating those rules. The key words are: ...
ppt - people.csail.mit.edu
... specific domain, but is not adaptable like human perception Approach Integrate conventional machine perception and machine learning with strategies for opportunistic development – Active perception (sensorimotor ‘toil’) Interpersonal influences (‘theft’) Development If a robot is engaged in a known ...
... specific domain, but is not adaptable like human perception Approach Integrate conventional machine perception and machine learning with strategies for opportunistic development – Active perception (sensorimotor ‘toil’) Interpersonal influences (‘theft’) Development If a robot is engaged in a known ...
Artificial Participation: An Interview with Warren Sack
... makes computer-based social technologies that make you stop and think about how much you are invested in automatic ways of conversing. The computer program ELIZA has been doing this since 1966, but as Sack discusses below, programs that ask questions rather than answer them never became a focus of t ...
... makes computer-based social technologies that make you stop and think about how much you are invested in automatic ways of conversing. The computer program ELIZA has been doing this since 1966, but as Sack discusses below, programs that ask questions rather than answer them never became a focus of t ...
SatPlan: Planning as Satisfiability
... time step, and the total number of time steps in guaranteed to be as small as possible. SatPlan-2006 differs from the 2004 version in that (i) mutex propagation is performed on the plan graph but only a subset of the inferred mutexes are encoded a binary clauses, and (ii) an encoding with Boolean va ...
... time step, and the total number of time steps in guaranteed to be as small as possible. SatPlan-2006 differs from the 2004 version in that (i) mutex propagation is performed on the plan graph but only a subset of the inferred mutexes are encoded a binary clauses, and (ii) an encoding with Boolean va ...
The brain-machine disanalogy revisited
... or it may be coaxed, cajoled, or forced into it, if that is possible at all. A brain may not be programmable, but ironically, a collection of humans may well be! As recounted in Gigerenzer and Goldstein (1996), before the advent of digital computers, such use of humans as computers was common. For e ...
... or it may be coaxed, cajoled, or forced into it, if that is possible at all. A brain may not be programmable, but ironically, a collection of humans may well be! As recounted in Gigerenzer and Goldstein (1996), before the advent of digital computers, such use of humans as computers was common. For e ...
Artificial Intelligence and Pro-Social Behaviour
... improving—the recently-trendy deep learning is just one of many fundamental improvements made over that time (Jacobs et al., 1991; McLachlan and Krishnan, 2008; Hinton et al., 2006; Le Roux and Bengio, 2008). Second, we have found ways to both acquire and store the data that makes up experience in d ...
... improving—the recently-trendy deep learning is just one of many fundamental improvements made over that time (Jacobs et al., 1991; McLachlan and Krishnan, 2008; Hinton et al., 2006; Le Roux and Bengio, 2008). Second, we have found ways to both acquire and store the data that makes up experience in d ...
Some Thoughts to Consider 1
... Semantic Web approach instead develops languages for expressing information in a ...
... Semantic Web approach instead develops languages for expressing information in a ...
Computational Notebooks for AI Education
... like a journal paper and run like a computer program. Although the idea is not new, the computational notebook approach has just recently begun to be widely adopted by computer science educators. For example, Peter Norvig recently shared notebooks on the web presenting topics in Artificial Intellige ...
... like a journal paper and run like a computer program. Although the idea is not new, the computational notebook approach has just recently begun to be widely adopted by computer science educators. For example, Peter Norvig recently shared notebooks on the web presenting topics in Artificial Intellige ...
Expert Systems - Department of Computer Science
... Dreyfus: points out ways in which AI theorists have overclaimed about what they can do. e.g. Feigenbaum claims that ‘DENDRAL has been in use for many years at university and industrial chemical labs around the world’. But ‘..when we called several university and industrial sites that do mass spectro ...
... Dreyfus: points out ways in which AI theorists have overclaimed about what they can do. e.g. Feigenbaum claims that ‘DENDRAL has been in use for many years at university and industrial chemical labs around the world’. But ‘..when we called several university and industrial sites that do mass spectro ...
(2008) The Symbol Grounding Problem has been solved. So What`s
... all, needs to be taken differently: namely that computational system cannot generate their own semantics, whereas natural systems, i.c. human brains, can. Indeed the mind/brain is capable to develop autonomously an enormous repertoire of concepts to deal with the environment and to associate them w ...
... all, needs to be taken differently: namely that computational system cannot generate their own semantics, whereas natural systems, i.c. human brains, can. Indeed the mind/brain is capable to develop autonomously an enormous repertoire of concepts to deal with the environment and to associate them w ...
1 Intelligent Library Systems: Artificial Intelligence Technology and
... Unfortunately, current methods of knowledge base creation and maintenance are typically fairly tedious. Human experts must be interviewed in detail to try to record their knowledge. Knowledge must be encoded into a knowledge structure, which requires that the "knowledge engineer" have some understa ...
... Unfortunately, current methods of knowledge base creation and maintenance are typically fairly tedious. Human experts must be interviewed in detail to try to record their knowledge. Knowledge must be encoded into a knowledge structure, which requires that the "knowledge engineer" have some understa ...
Intelligent Library Systems: Artificial Intelligence Technology and
... Unfortunately, current methods of knowledge base creation and maintenance are typically fairly tedious. Human experts must be interviewed in detail to try to record their knowledge. Knowledge must be encoded into a knowledge structure, which requires that the "knowledge engineer" have some understa ...
... Unfortunately, current methods of knowledge base creation and maintenance are typically fairly tedious. Human experts must be interviewed in detail to try to record their knowledge. Knowledge must be encoded into a knowledge structure, which requires that the "knowledge engineer" have some understa ...
Lecture-13-Environments - Computation Structures Group
... – Checkers, Boggle, RPG, HexaCheckers, Crosswords, ELIZA clone Oxygen Alliance Annual Meeting — February 25 – 28, 2003 ...
... – Checkers, Boggle, RPG, HexaCheckers, Crosswords, ELIZA clone Oxygen Alliance Annual Meeting — February 25 – 28, 2003 ...
From Natural Language to Soft Computing: New Paradigms
... The most important objective reached during the workshop is that it opened the way for an interdisciplinary collaboration between researchers in different countries (Romania, USA, France, Serbia, Chile, Greece and Hungary), with different professional experience (scientific researchers, doctors and ...
... The most important objective reached during the workshop is that it opened the way for an interdisciplinary collaboration between researchers in different countries (Romania, USA, France, Serbia, Chile, Greece and Hungary), with different professional experience (scientific researchers, doctors and ...
Joanna J. Bryson - Department of Computer Science
... Yifei Wang, Evolutionary Innovations and Dynamics in Wagners Model of Genetic Regulatory Networks, (Bath, with Nick Priest, October 2012–May2016). Paul Rauwolf Understanding the Ubiquity of Self-Deception: The Evolutionary Utility of Incorrect Information (Bath, with Marina De Vos, started October 2 ...
... Yifei Wang, Evolutionary Innovations and Dynamics in Wagners Model of Genetic Regulatory Networks, (Bath, with Nick Priest, October 2012–May2016). Paul Rauwolf Understanding the Ubiquity of Self-Deception: The Evolutionary Utility of Incorrect Information (Bath, with Marina De Vos, started October 2 ...