13 Experiments with a Pleasure-seeking - Automaton J. E. Doran
–AI Classics/files/AI/classics/Machine Intelligence 3/MI3-Ch.13-Doran.pdf
INTRODUCTION Attempts to write'intelligent' computer programs have commonly involved the choice for attack of some particular aspect of intelligent behaviour, together with the choice of some relevant task, or range of tasks, which the program must perform. The emphasis is sometimes on the generality of the program's ability, sometimes on the importance of the particular task which it can perform. Well-known examples of such programs are Newell, Shaw, and Simon's General Problem Solver (1959; see also Ernst and Newell, 1967), which is applicable to a wide range of simple problems, Samuel's checker (draughts) playing program (1959, 1967), and the program written by Evans (1964), which solves geometric analogy problems. However, there is another approach to the goal of machine intelligence which stresses the relationship of an organism to its environment and which sets out from the start to understand what is involved in this relationship. Long ago Grey Walter (1953) experimented with mechanical'tortoises' which could range over the floor in a lifelike manner. Toda (1962), in a whimsical and illuminating paper, has discussed the problems facing an automaton in a simple artificial environment. Friedman (1967), a psychologist, has described a computer simulation of instinctive behaviour involving an automaton equipped with sensory and motor systems. Sandewall (1967) has gone deeply into an automaton/environment relationship with a rather more formal approach. This list is far from complete. In particular, robots of various kinds are under construction at a number of research centres, notably at the Stanford Research Institute (Nilsson and Raphael, 1967). The reader may find it helpful to meditate on the situation of, say, a rat in a cage, as seen by the rat.
Jan-25-2015, 22:14:09 GMT