Machine Intelligence and Robotics: Report of the NASA Study Group : Final Report |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 72
Page 333
2 B. Perception Problems 2 C. Combinatorial and Scheduling Problems 3 D. Automatic Programming 3 E. Expert Consulting Systems 4 F. Natural Language Processing 4 G. Intelligent Retrieval from Databases 4 5 5 . 5 H. Theorem Proving 1 .
2 B. Perception Problems 2 C. Combinatorial and Scheduling Problems 3 D. Automatic Programming 3 E. Expert Consulting Systems 4 F. Natural Language Processing 4 G. Intelligent Retrieval from Databases 4 5 5 . 5 H. Theorem Proving 1 .
Page 338
... solve differential equations in symbolic form , analyze electronic circuits , understand limited amounts of human speech and natural language text , and write small computer programs to meet formal specifications .
... solve differential equations in symbolic form , analyze electronic circuits , understand limited amounts of human speech and natural language text , and write small computer programs to meet formal specifications .
Page 339
Even with this more limited outlook , discussion of Al ideas might well be of interest to cognitive psychologists and others attempting to understand natural intelligence . The process of perception studied in artificial intelligence ...
Even with this more limited outlook , discussion of Al ideas might well be of interest to cognitive psychologists and others attempting to understand natural intelligence . The process of perception studied in artificial intelligence ...
Page 341
A computer system capable of understanding a message in natural language would seem , then , to require ( no less than would a human ) both the contextual knowledge and the processes for making the inferences ( from this contextual ...
A computer system capable of understanding a message in natural language would seem , then , to require ( no less than would a human ) both the contextual knowledge and the processes for making the inferences ( from this contextual ...
Page 342
An examination of such empirical evidence , and an analysis of the arguments that have been advanced for a major impact of automation upon the nature of work has led us to a largely negative result . H. Theorem Proving There is little ...
An examination of such empirical evidence , and an analysis of the arguments that have been advanced for a major impact of automation upon the nature of work has led us to a largely negative result . H. Theorem Proving There is little ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
activities analysis applications approach areas Artificial Intelligence automated automatic base become behavior called centers complex computer science concept concerned construction cost described devices direct discussion domain elements engineering environment example existing experience exploration expressions field Figure functions GAME given goal Group heuristic human important increase interest knowledge language learning limited machine intelligence major manipulators mathematical mechanisms memory methods mission NASA nature Newell objects operations organization performance planning position possible present problem solving Proc procedure processing produce Project properties proving psychology reasoning represent representation robot rules selected sequence simple solution space spacecraft specific Stanford step structure Study success symbolic task techniques theorem theory tion understanding Univ University York