taxnodes:Technology: Overviews
Decoding Cursive Scripts
Singer, Yoram, Tishby, Naftali
Online cursive handwriting recognition is currently one of the most intriguing challenges in pattern recognition. This study presents a novel approach to this problem which is composed of two complementary phases.The first is dynamic encoding of the writing trajectory into a compact sequence of discrete motor control symbols. In this compact representation we largely remove the redundancy of the script, while preserving most of its intelligible components. In the second phase these control sequences are used to train adaptive probabilistic acyclic automata (PAA) for the important ingredients of the writing trajectories, e.g.
Decoding Cursive Scripts
Singer, Yoram, Tishby, Naftali
Online cursive handwriting recognition is currently one of the most intriguing challenges in pattern recognition. This study presents a novel approach to this problem which is composed of two complementary phases. The first is dynamic encoding of the writing trajectory into a compact sequence of discrete motor control symbols. In this compact representation we largely remove the redundancy of the script, while preserving most of its intelligible components. In the second phase these control sequences are used to train adaptive probabilistic acyclic automata (PAA) for the important ingredients of the writing trajectories, e.g.
A Report to ARPA on Twenty-First Century Intelligent Systems
Grosz, Barbara, Davis, Randall
This report stems from an April 1994 meeting, organized by AAAI at the suggestion of Steve Cross and Gio Wiederhold.1 The purpose of the meeting was to assist ARPA in defining an agenda for foundational AI research. Prior to the meeting, the fellows and officers of AAAI, as well as the report committee members, were asked to recommend areas in which major research thrusts could yield significant scientific gain -- with high potential impact on DOD applications -- over the next ten years. At the meeting, these suggestions and their relevance to current national needs and challenges in computing were discussed and debated. An initial draft of this report was circulated to the fellows and officers.
Knowledge-Based Systems Research and Applications in Japan, 1992
Feigenbaum, Edward A., Friedland, Peter E., Johnson, Bruce B., Nii, H. Penny, Schorr, Herbert, Shrobe, Howard, Engelmore, Robert S.
Representatives of universities and businesses were chosen by the Japan Technology Evaluation Center to investigate the state of the technology in Japan relative to the United States. The panel's report focused on applications, tools, and research and development in universities and industry and on major national projects.
AAAI 1993 Fall Symposium Reports
Levinson, Robert, Epstein, Susan, Terveen, Loren, Bonasso, R. Peter, Miller, David P., Bowyer, Kevin, Hall, Lawrence
The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence held its 1993 Fall Symposium Series on October 22-24 in Raleigh, North Carolina. This article contains summaries of the six symposia that were conducted: Automated Deduction in Nonstandard Logics; Games: Planning and Learning; Human-Computer Collaboration: Reconciling Theory, Synthesizing Practice; Instantiating Intelligent Agents; and Machine Learning and Computer Vision: What, Why, and How?
Mind, Evolution, and Computers
Science deals with knowledge of the material world based on objective reality. It is under constant attack by those who need magic, that is, concepts based on imagination and desire, with no basis in objective reality. A convenient target for such people is speculation on the machinery and method of operation of the human mind, questions that are still obscure in 1994. In The Emperor's New Mind, Roger Penrose attempts to look beyond objective reality for possible answers, using, in his argument, the theory that computers will never be able to duplicate the human experience. This article attempts to show where Penrose is in error by reviewing the evolution of men and computers and, based on this review, speculates about where computers might and might not imitate human perception. It then warns against the dangers of passive acceptance when respected scientists venture into the occult.