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Review of One Jump Ahead: Challenging Human Supremacy in Checkers

AI Magazine

Tinsley admirably overcomes this obstruction, how Tinsley's sacrifice enables his ultimate defeat, and how vided more than a glimpse of the Tinsley deals with the end of his domination University of Alberta set out to intense process it described. One Jump Ahead was written by the On a sad note, the community He succeeded. Even though One Jump Ahead is human nature. Schaeffer had to unfortunate because the world checkers the human aspects of Schaeffer's journey Finally, Kidder's book, The Soul of a New nearly unbeatable world champion of Schaeffer had to deal with However, One Jump Ahead is We also get to know many of his about and what the consequences of quite different and, in my opinion, friends and rivals, including Asa Long, this success were. We and turns has lessons to be learned was written by an outsider-- one who see these checkers players not just as about human nature.


AAAI News

AI Magazine

The conference will be held July 18-22, 1999, at the Omni Rosen Hotel and the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando, Florida. National Conference on Artificial by two keynote addresses: (1) AAAI is pleased to announce the Intelligence. This award will honor the author(s) of of AI in other organizations (for example, AAAI is happy to announce its sponsorship paper(s) deemed most influential, CRA, ACM, IEEE); or influential of the CHIKids program during chosen from a specific conference service as a government agency contract AAAI-99. The 1999 award will be given to monitor or program director, provides child care for conference the most influential paper(s) from the resulting in positive effects on the attendees' children, first started two First National Conference on Artificial field of AI. Nominees must be current years ago at the SIGCHI-96.


Automated Deduction: Looking Ahead

AI Magazine

To not only proving new mathematical obtain broader input, especially from countries results by computer but also formally verifying outside North America, a call for commentaries the correctness of (certain properties of) computer was issued to the automated deduction community.



What Are Intelligence? And Why? 1996 AAAI Presidential Address

AI Magazine

This article, derived from the 1996 Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence Presidential Address, explores the notion of intelligence from a variety of perspectives and finds that it "are" many things. It has, for example, been interpreted in a variety of ways even within our own field, ranging from the logical view (intelligence as part of mathematical logic) to the psychological view (intelligence as an empirical phenomenon of the natural world) to a variety of others. One goal of this article is to go back to basics, reviewing the things that we, individually and collectively, have taken as given, in part because we have taken multiple different and sometimes inconsistent things for granted. I believe it will prove useful to expose the tacit assumptions, models, and metaphors that we carry around as a way of understanding both what we're about and why we sometimes seem to be at odds with one another. Intelligence are also many things in the sense that is a product of evolution. Our physical bodies are in many ways overdetermined, unnecessarily complex, and inefficiently designed, that is, the predictable product of the blind search that is evolution. What's manifestly true of our anatomy is also likely true of our cognitive architecture. Natural intelligence is unlikely to be limited by principles of parsimony and is likely to be overdetermined, unnecessarily complex, and inefficiently designed. In this sense, intelligence are many things because is composed of the many elements that have been thrown together over evolutionary timescales. I suggest that in the face of that, searching for minimalism and elegance may be a diversion, for it simply may not be there. Somewhat more crudely put: The human mind is a 400,000-year-old legacy application -- and you expected to find structured programming? I end with a number of speculations, suggesting that there are some niches in the design space of intelligences that are currently underexplored. One example is the view that thinking is in part visual, and hence it might prove useful to develop representations and reasoning mechanisms that reason with diagrams (not just about them) and that take seriously their visual nature. I speculate as well that thinking may be a form of reliving, that re-acting out what we have experienced is one powerful way to think about and solve problems in the world. In this view, thinking is not simply the decontextualized manipulation of abstract symbols, powerful though that may be. Instead, some significant part of our thinking may be the reuse or simulation of our experiences in the environment. In keeping with this, I suggest that it may prove useful to marry the concreteness of reasoning in a model with the power that arises from reasoning abstractly.


Modern Masters of an Ancient Game

AI Magazine

Gary Kasparov in the final game of of Technology Computer Science Computer Chess, created in a tied, six-game match last May 11. Soon thereafter, the team moved to IBM, where they have been ever since, working under wraps on Deep Blue. The $100,000 third tier of the prize was awarded at AAAI-97 to this IBM team, who built the first computer chess machine that beat a world chess champion. The members of the Deep Blue team were also honored for their achievement with the Allen Newell Research Excellence Medal, sponsored by Carnegie Mellon University. Allen Newell Medals were presented to each of the major researchers in the field whose earlier contributions ultimately led to the success of Deep Blue.


Artificial Intelligence: What Works and What Doesn't?

AI Magazine

AI has been well supported by government research and development dollars for decades now, and people are beginning to ask hard questions: What really works? What are the limits? What doesn't work as advertised? What isn't likely to work? What isn't affordable? This article holds a mirror up to the community, both to provide feedback and stimulate more self-assessment. The significant accomplishments and strengths of the field are highlighted. The research agenda, strategy, and heuristics are reviewed, and a change of course is recommend-ed to improve the field's ability to produce reusable and interoperable components.


AAAI News

AI Magazine

Ballots will be due Applications of Artificial Intelligence have an accepted technical paper, back at the AAAI office no later than (IAAI-97) will be held in and then to students who are actively June 13. Conference on Knowledge Discovery are encouraged to apply. For further information be held November 8-10 at the Massachusetts following the American Statistical about the Scholarship Program, Institute of Technology in Association annual meeting in Anaheim. The topics Information about these conferences please contact AAAI at scholarships@aaai.org, of seven symposia will be: is available by writing to All student scholarship recipients Context in Knowledge Representation Registration materials for AAAI-97, will be required to participate in the and Natural Language Sasa IAAI-97, and KDD-97 are now available Student Volunteer Program to support Buvac (buvac@cs.stanford.edu), For further information, participation is a valuable contribution.


AAAI News

AI Magazine

Topics An all-star panel assembled to pose life, and a wealth of other topics were of the technical papers spanned a "Challenge Problems for Artificial Intelligence."


Woody Bledsoe: His Life and Legacy

AI Magazine

Woody was one of the founders of AI, making early contributions in pattern recognition and automated reasoning. He continued to make significant contributions to AI throughout his long career. His legacy consists not only of his scientific work but also of several generations of scientists who learned from Woody the joy of scientific research and the way to go about it. Woody's enthusiasm, his perpetual sense of optimism, his can-do attitude, and his deep sense of duty to humanity offered those who knew him the hope and comfort that truly good and great men do exist.