Applications of Case-Based Reasoning in Molecular Biology
Jurisica, Igor, Glasgow, Janice
Thus, one of the primary goals of a CBR system is to find the most similar, or most relevant, cases for new input problems. The effectiveness of CBR depends on the quality and quantity of cases in a case base. In some domains, even a small number of cases provide good solutions, but in other domains, an increased number of unique cases improves problemsolving capabilities of CBR systems because there are more experiences to draw on. The reader can find detailed complete theories, and rapid evolution; reasoning descriptions of the CBR process and systems in is often based on experience rather Kolodner (1993). Experts remember are presented in Leake (1996), and practically positive experiences for possible reuse of solutions; negative experiences are used to avoid oriented descriptions of CBR can be potentially unsuccessful outcomes.
Mar-15-2004
- Country:
- Europe
- Germany > Baden-Württemberg
- Karlsruhe Region > Heidelberg (0.04)
- Greece (0.04)
- Italy > Emilia-Romagna
- Metropolitan City of Bologna > Bologna (0.04)
- United Kingdom > England
- Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.04)
- Oxfordshire > Oxford (0.04)
- Germany > Baden-Württemberg
- North America
- Canada
- United States
- California
- San Diego County > San Diego (0.04)
- San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.15)
- San Mateo County > Menlo Park (0.14)
- Santa Clara County
- Maryland > Montgomery County
- Bethesda (0.04)
- Missouri > St. Louis County
- St. Louis (0.04)
- New York > Erie County
- Buffalo (0.04)
- California
- Europe
- Industry:
- Technology: