Principles of Artificial IntelligenceA classic introduction to artificial intelligence intended to bridge the gap between theory and practice, Principles of Artificial Intelligence describes fundamental AI ideas that underlie applications such as natural language processing, automatic programming, robotics, machine vision, automatic theorem proving, and intelligent data retrieval. Rather than focusing on the subject matter of the applications, the book is organized around general computational concepts involving the kinds of data structures used, the types of operations performed on the data structures, and the properties of the control strategies used. Principles of Artificial Intelligenceevolved from the author's courses and seminars at Stanford University and University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and is suitable for text use in a senior or graduate AI course, or for individual study. |
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Page 212
... described how we might proceed in those cases in which a fact ( sub ) expression might be needed more than once in the same proof , with differently named variables in each usage . Of course , there is also the very important problem of ...
... described how we might proceed in those cases in which a fact ( sub ) expression might be needed more than once in the same proof , with differently named variables in each usage . Of course , there is also the very important problem of ...
Page 319
... described in Section 7.6.2 . Use any of the deduction systems described in chapters 5 and 6 . 7.14 A robot pet , Rover , is currently outside and wants to get inside . Rover cannot open the door to let itself in ; but Rover can bark ...
... described in Section 7.6.2 . Use any of the deduction systems described in chapters 5 and 6 . 7.14 A robot pet , Rover , is currently outside and wants to get inside . Rover cannot open the door to let itself in ; but Rover can bark ...
Page 365
... described by the unit is a member of some set . ( If the object described by the unit had been a set itself , then an SS predicate would have been used to state that it was a subset of some other set . ) Second , the values of the ...
... described by the unit is a member of some set . ( If the object described by the unit had been a set itself , then an SS predicate would have been used to state that it was a subset of some other set . ) Second , the values of the ...
Contents
PROLOGUE | 1 |
PRODUCTION SYSTEMS AND AI | 17 |
SEARCH STRATEGIES FOR | 53 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
8-puzzle achieve actions Adders AI production algorithm AND/OR graph applied Artificial Intelligence atomic formula backed-up value backtracking backward block breadth-first breadth-first search called chapter clause form CLEAR(C component CONT(Y,A contains control regime control strategy cost Deleters delineation depth-first search described discussed disjunction domain element-of evaluation function example existentially quantified F-rule formula frame problem global database goal expression goal node goal stack goal wff graph-search HANDEMPTY heuristic HOLDING(A implication initial state description knowledge literal nodes logic monotone restriction natural language processing negation node labeled ONTABLE(A optimal path pickup(A precondition predicate calculus problem-solving procedure production system proof prove recursive regress represent representation resolution refutation result robot problem rule applications search graph search tree selected semantic network sequence shown in Figure Skolem function solution graph solve stack(A STRIPS structure subgoal substitutions successors Suppose symbols termination condition theorem theorem-proving tip nodes universally quantified unstack(C,A variables WORKS-IN