Energy
Letters to the Editor.
Shortliffe, Edward H., Wilson, Kirk, Brender, David, Cott, Harold Van
These debates end by a culture for accommodating of the medical AI community, I feel I up merely as arguments in which its limited knowledge representations. Those of us in intelligence is). Depending such an extent that the limits of the medical AI have been highly sensitized upon what properties of human and computer system would no longer be to common misunderstandings artificial intelligence are stressed we a representational problem? We also encounter a general lack of of the relationship. Will we need to ascribe pleasure and realistic expectations regarding the The problem is that the models of pain to our computer experts?
FAST, CHEAP AND OUT OF CONTROL: A ROBOT INVASION OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
We argue that the time between mission conception and implementation can be radically reduced, that launch mass can be slashed, that totally autonomous robots can be more reliable than ground controlled robots, and that large numbers of robots can change the tradeoff between reliability of individual components and overall mission success. Lastly, we suggest that within a few years it will be possible at modest cost to invade a planet with millions of tiny robotsJournal of The British Interplanetary Society, Vol. 42, pp 478-485
Foundations and Grand Challenges of Artificial Intelligence: AAAI Presidential Address
AAAI is a society devoted to supporting the progress in science, technology and applications of AI. I thought I would use this occasion to share with you some of my thoughts on the recent advances in AI, the insights and theoretical foundations that have emerged out of the past thirty years of stable, sustained, systematic explorations in our field, and the grand challenges motivating the research in our field.
Intelligent Computer-Aided Engineering
The goal of intelligent computer-aided engineering (ICAE) is to construct computer programs that capture a significant fraction of an engineer's knowledge. Today, ICAE systems are a goal, not a reality. This article attempts to refine that goal and suggest how to get there. We begin by examining several scenarios of what ICAE systems could be like. Next we describe why ICAE won't evolve directly from current applications of expert system technology to engineering problems. I focus on qualitative physics as a critical area where progress is needed, both in terms of representations and styles of reasoning.
Real-Time Knowledge-Based Systems
Laffey, Thomas J., Cox, Preston A., Schmidt, James L., Kao, Simon M., Readk, Jackson Y.
Real-time domains present a new and challenging environment for the application of knowledge-based problem-solving techniques. However, a substantial amount of research is still needed to solve many difficult problems before real-time expert systems can enhance current monitoring and control systems. In this article, we examine how the real-time problem domain is significantly different from those domains which have traditionally been solved by expert systems. We conduct a survey on the current state of the art in applying knowledge-based systems to real-time problems and describe the key issues that are pertinent in a real-time domain. The survey is divided into three areas: applications, tools, and theoretic issues. From the results of the survey, we identify a set of real-time research issues that have yet to be solved and point out limitations of current tools for real-time problems. Finally, we propose a set of requirements that a real-time knowledge-based system must satisfy.
Contributors
Sargur N. Srihari is a professor and acting chairman of the Department of Computer Science, State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo. The author of "Recognizing Address Blocks on Mail Pieces," Srihari is an associate editor of the journal Pattern Recognition and is chairman of the technical committee on text-processing applications of the International Mike Baird, who coauthored the tribute to Kvetoslav Prazdny, is manager of Association for Pattern Recognition. Srihari is also currently directing two Intelligence Center 1185 Coleman Avenue, Santa Clara, California 95052. Jeffrey Stone is a consultant who watches the computer industry and Jonathan J. Hull is a research assistant Digital Equipment Corporation that reports new developments and trends. The opinions expressed "Recognizing Address Blocks on Mail address is Knowledge Systems Corporation, in his article are his own. Jeffrey Stout is on the research staff of computer vision, and artificial intelligence. An Expert Elevator report on AI and education, is an Buffalo, where he is also currently Designer that Uses Knowledge-Based associate professor in the Department working on his Ph.D. His research Backtracking." of Mathematics and Computer Science interests include image processing, at Millersville University, computer graphics, and computer segmentation Jay M. Tenenbaum, who coauthored Millersville, Pennsylvania 1755 1. Palumbo is a the tribute to Kvetoslav Prazdny, is a coauthor of "Recognizing Address Schlumberger Fellow at the Schlumberger John McDermott is a principal scientist Blocks on Mail Pieces."
Intelligent-Machine Research at CESAR
The Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) Center for Engineering Systems Advanced Research (CESAR) is a national center for multidisciplinary long-range research and development (R&D) in machine intelligence and advanced control theory. Intelligent machines (including sensor-based robots) can be viewed as artificially created operational systems capable of autonomous decision making and action. One goal of the research is autonomous remote operations in hazardous environments. This review describes highlights of CESAR research through 1986 and alludes to future plans.