Mind: Introduction to Cognitive Science -- A Review
Bennett, Bonnie Holte, Nelson, Dwight, Pannier, Russell, Sullivan, Thomas, Robinson-Riegler, Gregory
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.
CREWS_NS: Scheduling Train Crews in The Netherlands
Morgado, Ernesto M., Martins, Joao P.
We present a system, CREWS_NS, that is used in the long-term scheduling of drivers and guards for the Dutch Railways. CREWS_NS is built on top of CREWS, a scheduling tool for speeding the development of scheduling applications. CREWS heavily relies on the use of AI techniques and has been built as a white-box system, in the sense that the planner can perceive what is going on, can interact with the system by proposing alternatives or querying decisions, and can adapt the behavior of the system to changing circumstances. CREWS has mechanisms for dealing with the constant changes that occur in input data, can identify the consequences of the change, and guides the planner in accommodating the changes in the already built schedules (rescheduling).
An Intelligent System for Case Review and Risk Assessment in Social 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.
What Are Intelligence? And Why? 1996 AAAI Presidential Address
It has, for example, been interpreted in a variety of ways even within our own field, ranging from the logical view (intelligence as part of mathematical logic) to the psychological view (intelligence as an empirical phenomenon of the natural world) to a variety of others. Our physical bodies are in many ways overdetermined, unnecessarily complex, and inefficiently designed, that is, the predictable product of the blind search that is evolution. Natural intelligence is unlikely to be limited by principles of parsimony and is likely to be overdetermined, unnecessarily complex, and inefficiently designed. One example is the view that thinking is in part visual, and hence it might prove useful to develop representations and reasoning mechanisms that reason with diagrams (not just about them) and that take seriously their visual nature.
MITA: An Information-Extraction Approach to the Analysis of Free-Form Text in Life Insurance Applications
Glasgow, Barry, Mandell, Alan, Binney, Dan, Ghemri, Lila, Fisher, David
MetLife processes over 260,000 life insurance applications a year. MetLife's intelligent text analyzer (MITA) uses the information-extraction technique of natural language processing to structure the extensive textual fields on a life insurance application. MITA is currently processing 20,000 life insurance applications a month. Eighty-nine percent of the textual fields processed by MITA exceed the established confidence-level threshold and are potentially available for further analysis by domain-specific analyzers.
AI, Decision Science, and Psychological Theory in Decisions about People: A Case Study in Jury Selection
The emerging literature on combined systems is directed at domains where the prediction of human behavior is not required. Professionals concerned with human outcomes make decisions that are intuitive or analytic or some combination of both. Justifications and methodology are presented for combining analytic and intuitive agents in an expert system that supports professional decision making. The system presented demonstrates the challenges and opportunities inherent in developing and using AI-collaborative technology to solve social problems.
Case- and Constraint-Based Project Planning for Apartment Construction
Lee, Kyoung Jun, Kim, Hyun Woo, Lee, Jae Kyu, Kim, Tae Hwan
To effectively generate a fast and consistent apartment construction project network, Hyundai Engineering and Construction and Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology developed a case- and constraint-based project-planning expert system for an apartment domain. The system, FAS-TRAK- APT, is inspired by the use of previous cases by a human expert project planner for planning a new project and the modification of these cases by the project planner using his/her knowledge of domain constraints. This large-scale, case-based, and mixed-initiative planning system, integrated with intensive constraint-based adaptation, utilizes semantic-level metaconstraints and human decisions for compensating incomplete cases imbedding specific planning knowledge. The case- and constraint-based architecture inherently supports cross-checking cases with constraints during system development and maintenance.
Review of the Art of Causal Conjecture
This book probably contains more definitions than any other book I can recall reading; however, despite these definitions, one of the attractive features of the book is its reader might have been exposed when essential simplicity. One might have draft of three chapters for an first learning about probability. However, he about probability and a way that naturally of the book, but this is not found his attention increasingly distracted links probability and causality. Appendixes do present an by the possibilities provided He distinguishes the traditional events overview of the conventional by probability trees for understanding of probability theory, which he calls paradigm, and there are links throughout probability and causality--so much Moivrean events and which correspond the book between this and the so, in fact, that instead of finishing to sets of leaf nodes (or, equivalently, new approach presented here, but the the first book, he wrote a different one of paths from the root to a leaf), from book can be read without a deep grasp on this second topic. It is this second Humean events, which are steps, or of the conventional paradigm.
An Intelligent System for Case Review and Risk Assessment in Social Services
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.