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Empirical Methods in AI

AI Magazine

In the last few years, we have witnessed a major growth in the use of empirical methods in AI. In part, this growth has arisen from the availability of fast networked computers that allow certain problems of a practical size to be tackled for the first time. There is also a growing realization that results obtained empirically are no less valuable than theoretical results. I identify some of the emerging trends in this area by describing a recent workshop that brought together researchers using empirical methods as far apart as robotics and knowledge-based systems.


Computer Bridge: A Big Win for AI Planning

AI Magazine

A computer program that uses AI planning techniques is now the world champion computer program in the game of Contract Bridge. As reported in The New York Times and The Washington Post, this program -- a new version of Great Game Products' BRIDGE BARON program -- won the Baron Barclay World Bridge Computer Challenge, an international competition hosted in July 1997 by the American Contract Bridge League. It is well known that the game tree search techniques used in computer programs for games such as Chess and Checkers work differently from how humans think about such games. This article gives an overview of the planning techniques that we have incorporated into the BRIDGE BARON and discusses what the program's victory signifies for research on AI planning and game playing.


Empirical Methods in AI

AI Magazine

In the last few years, we have witnessed a major growth in the use of empirical methods in AI. In part, this growth has arisen from the availability of fast networked computers that allow certain problems of a practical size to be tackled for the first time. There is also a growing realization that results obtained empirically are no less valuable than theoretical results. Experiments can, for example, offer solutions to problems that have defeated a theoretical attack and provide insights that are not possible from a purely theoretical analysis. I identify some of the emerging trends in this area by describing a recent workshop that brought together researchers using empirical methods as far apart as robotics and knowledge-based systems.



Mind: Introduction to Cognitive Science -- A Review

AI Magazine

Understanding the mind is one of the great "holy grails" of twentieth-century research. Regardless of training, most people who come in contact with the field of AI are at least partially motivated by the glimmer of hope that they will get a better understanding of the mind. This quest, of course, is a rich and complex one. It is easy to get mired in minutiae along the way, be they the optimization of an algorithm, the details of a mental model, or the intricacies of a logical argument.


A Review of Machine Learning

AI Magazine

Tom Mitchell states that the goal of his text Machine Learning is to present the key algorithms and theory that form the core of machine learning. Not only has Mitchell suc-ceeded in his primary goal, but he has accomplished a number of other important goals.


An Intelligent System for Case Review and Risk Assessment in Social Services

AI Magazine

This article reports on the development and implementation of DISXPERT, an intelligent rule-based system tool for referral of social security disability recipients to vocational rehabilitation services. The growing use of paraprofessionals as caseworkers responsible for assessment in the social services area provides fertile domain areas for new and innovative application of intelligent system technology. The main function of DISXPERT is to provide support to paraprofessional caseworkers in reaching unbiased and consistent assessment decisions regarding referral of clients to vocational rehabilitation services. The results after four years of use demonstrate that paraprofessionals using DISXPERT can make assessments in less time and with a level of accuracy superior to the vocational rehabilitation domain professionals using manual methods. This article discusses the problem domain, the design and development of the system, uses of AI technology, payoffs, and deployment and maintenance of the system.



Empirical Methods in Information Extraction

AI Magazine

This article surveys the use of empirical, machine-learning methods for a particular natural language-understanding task-information extraction. The author presents a generic architecture for information-extraction systems and then surveys the learning algorithms that have been developed to address the problems of accuracy, portability, and knowledge acquisition for each component of the architecture.


Linguistic Knowledge and Empirical Methods in Speech Recognition

AI Magazine

Automatic speech recognition is one of the fastest growing and commercially most promising applications of natural language technology. The technology has achieved a point where carefully designed systems for suitably constrained applications are a reality. Commercial systems are available today for such tasks as large-vocabulary dictation and voice control of medical equipment. This article reviews how state-of-the-art speech-recognition systems combine statistical modeling, linguistic knowledge, and machine learning to achieve their performance and points out some of the research issues in the field.