A Community-driven vision for a new Knowledge Resource for AI

Chaudhri, Vinay K, Baru, Chaitan, Bennett, Brandon, Bhatt, Mehul, Cassel, Darion, Cohn, Anthony G, Dechter, Rina, Erdem, Esra, Ferrucci, Dave, Forbus, Ken, Gelfond, Gregory, Genesereth, Michael, Gordon, Andrew S., Grosof, Benjamin, Gupta, Gopal, Hendler, Jim, Israni, Sharat, Josephson, Tyler R., Kyllonen, Patrick, Lierler, Yuliya, Lifschitz, Vladimir, McFate, Clifton, McGinty, Hande K., Morgenstern, Leora, Oltramari, Alessandro, Paritosh, Praveen, Roth, Dan, Shepard, Blake, Shimzu, Cogan, Vrandečić, Denny, Whiting, Mark, Witbrock, Michael

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

The Cyc project, started in 1984, created the first large-scale database of commonsense knowledge. The initiative continues to this day with its aim to provide a comprehensive ontology and knowledge base of commonsense knowledge to enable human-like reasoning for AI systems. In the concluding paragraph of his Communications of the Association of Computing Machinery (CACM) 1995 article A Large-Scale Investment in Knowledge Infrastructure [52], Cyc's founder Douglas B. Lenat wrote: Is Cyc necessary? How far would a user get with something simpler than Cyc but that lacks everyday commonsense knowledge? Nobody knows; the question will be settled empirically. Our guess is most of these applications will eventually tap the synergy in a suite of sources (including neural nets and decision theory), one of which will be Cyc. Although 30 years have passed since the above article was written, AI research community has not conclusively settled [10] the question "How far would a user get with something simpler than Cyc but that lacks everyday commonsense knowledge?" However, it is clear that significant strides have been made in addressing many of the tasks that were original Cyc use cases, including information retrieval, semi-automatically linking multiple heterogeneous external information sources, spelling and grammar correction, machine translation, natural language understanding and speech understanding.