Information Technology
Economic Properties of Social Networks
Kakade, Sham M., Kearns, Michael, Ortiz, Luis E., Pemantle, Robin, Suri, Siddharth
We examine the marriage of recent probabilistic generative models for social networks with classical frameworks from mathematical economics. Weare particularly interested in how the statistical structure of such networks influences global economic quantities such as price variation. Ourfindings are a mixture of formal analysis, simulation, and experiments on an international trade data set from the United Nations.
Economic Properties of Social Networks
Kakade, Sham M., Kearns, Michael, Ortiz, Luis E., Pemantle, Robin, Suri, Siddharth
We examine the marriage of recent probabilistic generative models for social networks with classical frameworks from mathematical economics. We are particularly interested in how the statistical structure of such networks influences global economic quantities such as price variation. Our findings are a mixture of formal analysis, simulation, and experiments on an international trade data set from the United Nations.
Synchronization of neural networks by mutual learning and its application to cryptography
Klein, Einat, Mislovaty, Rachel, Kanter, Ido, Ruttor, Andreas, Kinzel, Wolfgang
Two neural networks that are trained on their mutual output synchronize to an identical time dependant weight vector. This novel phenomenon can be used for creation of a secure cryptographic secret-key using a public channel. Several models for this cryptographic system have been suggested, and have been tested for their security under different sophisticated attackstrategies. The most promising models are networks that involve chaos synchronization. The synchronization process of mutual learning is described analytically using statistical physics methods.
The Workshops at the Twentieth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Aliod, Diego Molla, Alonso, Eduardo, Bangalore, Srinivas, Beck, Joseph, Bhanu, Bir, Blythe, Jim, Boddy, Mark, Cesta, Amedeo, Grobelink, Marko, Hakkani-Tur, Dilek, Harabagiu, Sanda, Lege, Alain, McGuinness, Deborah L., Marsella, Stacy, Milic-Frayling, Natasha, Mladenic, Dunja, Oblinger, Dan, Rybski, Paul, Shvaiko, Pavel, Smith, Stephen, Srivastava, Biplav, Tejada, Sheila, Vilhjalmsson, Hannes, Thorisson, Kristinn, Tur, Gokhan, Vicedo, Jose Luis, Wache, Holger
The AAAI-05 workshops were held on Saturday and Sunday, July 9-10, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The thirteen workshops were Contexts and Ontologies: Theory, Practice and Applications, Educational Data Mining, Exploring Planning and Scheduling for Web Services, Grid and Autonomic Computing, Human Comprehensible Machine Learning, Inference for Textual Question Answering, Integrating Planning into Scheduling, Learning in Computer Vision, Link Analysis, Mobile Robot Workshop, Modular Construction of Humanlike Intelligence, Multiagent Learning, Question Answering in Restricted Domains, and Spoken Language Understanding.
Reconsiderations
In 1983, I gave the AAAI president's address titled "Artificial Intelligence Prepares for 2001." An article, based on that talk, was published soon after in "AI Magazine. In this article, I retract or modify some of the points made in that piece and reaffirm others. Specifically, I now acknowledge the many important facets of AI research beyond high-level reasoning but maintain my view about the importance of integrated AI systems, such as mobile robots.
The Origins of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence
This article provides a historical background on how AAAI came into existence. It provides a rationale for why we needed our own society. This article provides a brief description of the considerations that went into making the final choices. It also provides a description of the historic first AAAI conference and the people that made it happen.
The Workshops at the Twentieth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Aliod, Diego Molla, Alonso, Eduardo, Bangalore, Srinivas, Beck, Joseph, Bhanu, Bir, Blythe, Jim, Boddy, Mark, Cesta, Amedeo, Grobelink, Marko, Hakkani-Tur, Dilek, Harabagiu, Sanda, Lege, Alain, McGuinness, Deborah L., Marsella, Stacy, Milic-Frayling, Natasha, Mladenic, Dunja, Oblinger, Dan, Rybski, Paul, Shvaiko, Pavel, Smith, Stephen, Srivastava, Biplav, Tejada, Sheila, Vilhjalmsson, Hannes, Thorisson, Kristinn, Tur, Gokhan, Vicedo, Jose Luis, Wache, Holger
The AAAI-05 workshops were held on Saturday and Sunday, July 9-10, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The thirteen workshops were Contexts and Ontologies: Theory, Practice and Applications, Educational Data Mining, Exploring Planning and Scheduling for Web Services, Grid and Autonomic Computing, Human Comprehensible Machine Learning, Inference for Textual Question Answering, Integrating Planning into Scheduling, Learning in Computer Vision, Link Analysis, Mobile Robot Workshop, Modular Construction of Humanlike Intelligence, Multiagent Learning, Question Answering in Restricted Domains, and Spoken Language Understanding.
Identifying Terrorist Activity with AI Plan Recognition Technology
Jarvis, Peter A., Lunt, Teresa F., Myers, Karen L.
We describe the application of plan-recognition techniques to support human intelligence analysts in processing national security alerts. Our approach is designed to take the noisy results of traditional data-mining tools and exploit causal knowledge about attacks to relate activities and uncover the intent underlying them. Identifying intent enables us to both prioritize and explain alert sets to analysts in a readily digestible format. Our empirical evaluation demonstrates that the approach can handle alert sets of as many as 20 elements and can readily distinguish between false and true alarms. We discuss the important opportunities for future work that will increase the cardinality of the alert sets to the level demanded by a deployable application. In particular, we outline the need to bring the analysts into the process and for heuristic improvements to the plan-recognition algorithm.
The 2004 Mobile Robot Competition and Exhibition
Smart, William D., Tejada, Sheila, Maxwell, Bruce, Stroupe, Ashley, Casper, Jennifer, Jacoff, Adam, Yanco, Holly, Bugajska, Magda
The thirteenth AAAI Mobile Robot Competition and Exhibition was once again collocated with AAAI-2204, in San Jose, California. As in previous years, the robot events drew competitors from both academia and industry to showcase state-ofthe- art mobile robot software and systems in four organized events.
Reports on the 2005 AAAI Spring Symposium Series
Anderson, Michael L., Barkowsky, Thomas, Berry, Pauline, Blank, Douglas, Chklovski, Timothy, Domingos, Pedro, Druzdzel, Marek J., Freksa, Christian, Gersh, John, Hegarty, Mary, Leong, Tze-Yun, Lieberman, Henry, Lowe, Ric, Luperfoy, Susann, Mihalcea, Rada, Meeden, Lisa, Miller, David P., Oates, Tim, Popp, Robert, Shapiro, Daniel, Schurr, Nathan, Singh, Push, Yen, John
The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence presented its 2005 Spring Symposium Series on Monday through Wednesday, March 21-23, 2005 at Stanford University in Stanford, California. The topics of the eight symposia in this symposium series were (1) AI Technologies for Homeland Security; (2) Challenges to Decision Support in a Changing World; (3) Developmental Robotics; (4) Dialogical Robots: Verbal Interaction with Embodied Agents and Situated Devices; (5) Knowledge Collection from Volunteer Contributors; (6) Metacognition in Computation; (7) Persistent Assistants: Living and Working with AI; and (8) Reasoning with Mental and External Diagrams: Computational Modeling and Spatial Assistance.