Machine Intelligence and Robotics: Report of the NASA Study Group : Final Report |
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Page 340
... possible combinations or sequences from which to choose an answer is very large . Routine attempts at solving these types of problems soon generate a combinatorial explosion of possibilities that exhaust even the capacities of large ...
... possible combinations or sequences from which to choose an answer is very large . Routine attempts at solving these types of problems soon generate a combinatorial explosion of possibilities that exhaust even the capacities of large ...
Page 344
... possible that NASA could achieve orders - of - magnitude improvement in mission effectiveness at reduced cost by the 1990s . Modern computer systems , if appropriately adapted , are expected to be fully capable of extracting relevant ...
... possible that NASA could achieve orders - of - magnitude improvement in mission effectiveness at reduced cost by the 1990s . Modern computer systems , if appropriately adapted , are expected to be fully capable of extracting relevant ...
Page 346
... possible and can trigger requirements for more advanced space transportation systems in the 1990s . This will enable expanded space industrial activities and , by the end of this century , could lead to Satellite Power Systems for solar ...
... possible and can trigger requirements for more advanced space transportation systems in the 1990s . This will enable expanded space industrial activities and , by the end of this century , could lead to Satellite Power Systems for solar ...
Page 349
... possible historical reasons . The value of information of disasters such as forest fires is of comparably short duration . The demand for high - volume onboard data processing and pertinent automated information extraction is therefore ...
... possible historical reasons . The value of information of disasters such as forest fires is of comparably short duration . The demand for high - volume onboard data processing and pertinent automated information extraction is therefore ...
Page 350
... possible to the sensors where the data is collected , namely by the robot in space . However , examining the various ground operations in detail , we con- clude that most of those that must remain on the ground could also be automated ...
... possible to the sensors where the data is collected , namely by the robot in space . However , examining the various ground operations in detail , we con- clude that most of those that must remain on the ground could also be automated ...
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algorithms Allen Newell analysis applications areas Artificial Intelligence automated base basic behavior Chart chess complex computer science concepts Conf construction DENDRAL domain element engineering example experience Feigenbaum Feldman Figure function GAME generate-and-test goal H. A. Simon heuristic programming heuristic search human hypotheses ill-structured problems inference Information Processing input intelligence and robotics INTERLISP knowledge logic Logic Theorist machine intelligence manipulators mathematical mechanisms Memo memory methods Michie Minsky mission operations MYCIN NASA NASA's Natural Language Newell ORGANISM-1 Papers 3d Intl pattern recognition performance problem solving problem space problem statement Proc procedure Project Project MAC PSYC psychology representation rover rules Semantic sensors sequence Simon simplex method Slagle solution solver spacecraft Stanford Research Institute Stanford Univ structure Study Group symbolic task Tech techniques TEIRESIAS teleoperator theorem proving theory tion variables York