Intelligent Information Technologies: Concepts, Methodologies, Tools, and Applications: Concepts, Methodologies, Tools, and ApplicationsSugumaran, Vijayan Intelligent Information Technologies: Concepts, Methodologies, Tools, and Applications compiles 140 chapters from 340 of the world's leading experts on such next-generation technologies as Semantic Web, multi-agent systems, and Web ontologies. This vast, four-volume collection provides a foundational body of research to drive further evolution and innovation in the context of these technologies and their applications, of which the scientific, technological, and commercial communities have only begun to scratch the surface. Comprehensively covering such leading-edge developments as artificial intelligence, virtual environments, and multi-media information processing, Intelligent Information Technologies: Concepts, Methodologies, Tools, and Applications is an essential reference acquisition for any library seeking to cover the leading edge of technological innovations. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 85
... identification (what knowledge is needed to develop products and partnerships), knowledge creation (use various ... identified, cataloged, and stored using structures that enables users to find the correct information when they need ...
... identified roles: Administrator, Designer and Subject. It is possible for a user to have multiple roles. Administrators represent the highest level of user. These users manage user accounts. They have the ability to create, modify and ...
... identified as borders specifically. Once the goal is found, the subject is at the same initial position, and within 3 minutes tries to find the goal as many times as possible. Testing was administered via computer terminals in a ...
... identified with the so-called new AI or with the embodied cognitive science approach, which started in the end of the 1980s (Pfeifer & Scheier, 1999). This movement identified the root of intelligence in the interaction ofthe body with ...
... identified as stimuli S or responses R (with {S,R} ⊆O) without any further assumptions about the “nature” of these different sets of objects. Furthermore, there must be different kinds of functions p i: • (Type E Functions [f E ]:) p i ...
Contents
xxv | |
xxx | |
lv | |
lvi | |
Development and Design Methodologies | 388 |
Tools and Technologies | 736 |
Utilization and Application | 1284 |
Organizational and Social Implications | 1635 |
Managerial Impact | 1797 |
Critical Issues | 1879 |
Emerging Trends | 2073 |
Index | 2397 |