Main Page | Forum
I should point out that the opinions expressed here are my own and that I accept no liability for mistakes and/or omissions: caveat lector. A Standard disclaimer applies.
Back

Honours | Calendar | References (Normal) (Formal) (Quick) (Links only) (BibTeX) (Light Toggle)

Total of 21 records found.
Current page is: file:///C:/My Documents/Education/University/public_html/comp307.html?HTML=true&
File is: comp307_lite.html

Sort by Category, type, title, short_title, author, pub_date, read_date, rank. View rank.


term[LN] Title: Lecture Notes
Author(s): Xiaoying Gao, Peter-Andreae


link[FSS] Title: Formalizing Search Spaces
Author(s): Mark Rich
Remote: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~richm/cs540/notes/search-un.html
Found/Read: 30/07/2002
Comments: Assignment 2 reference.
Including code for java.


link[WJP] Title: The "Water-jugs Problem"
Remote: http://www.john.fletcher.dial.pipex.com/water_jugs.shtml
Found/Read: 30/07/2002
Comments: Assignment 2 reference with prolog code.

See also tut examples logic & Prolog.


term[SSEC] Title: Search strategy evaluation criteria
Comments:



quote[BFQ] Title: Bob Frankston Quote on AI
Remote: reference.html#PAW
Comments: INTERVIEWER: What do you think about artificial intelligence?
FRANKSTON: The problem is that the expression "AI" is being hyped a lot these days. Anytime you understand what's going on, you tend to be reluctant to use the word intelligence. Many commercial expert systems are simply decision tables that are too large to easily solve. There is nothing mystical about it. I tend to view AI as more interesting for understanding cognition and thinking in general systems. I’m enthusiastic about AI as it applies to trying to understand how to address complicated problems. We can learn a lot from human intelligence, which manages to perform impressive feats with what may be a mediocre computing engine. In our attempts to understand this intelligence, we're developing principles for dealing with complexity. It's fair to say that much of what's done today in computing is derived from the quest for AI.


term[PRED] Title: predicate
Comments: "The notion used in Prolog/Datalog is based on providing predicates with unique names. A predicate has an implicit meaning, which is suggested by the predicate name, and a fixed number of arguments. If the arguments are all constant values, the predicate simply states that a certain fact is true. If, on the other hand, the predicate has variables as arguments, it is either considered as a query or as part of a rule or constraint. Throughout this chapter, we adopt the Prolog convention that all constant values in a predicate are either numeric or character strings; they are represented as identifiers (or names) starting with lowercase letters only, whereas variable names always start with a uppercase letter." - Quote from Pg.803 [FDBS]


link[YAHOO] Title: Yahoo! Directory - Computer Science > Artificial Intelligence
Remote: http://dir.yahoo.com/Science/Computer_Science/Artificial_Intelligence/
Found/Read: 06/09/2002


link[ALICE] Title: ALICE
Remote: http://aimovie.warnerbros.com/
Found/Read: 09/09/2002
Comments: Argue with ALICE


link[AIWB] Title: AI Webbot
Remote: http://www.smarterchild.com/
Found/Read: 09/09/2002


link[AIGB] Title: Artificial intelligence taps the global brain
Author(s): Ariana Eunjung Cha
Remote: http://www.iht.com/articles/69914.htm
Comments: AI web bot that is capable of answering questions using data from the web.


link[OSS] Title: Over-Simplification Syndrome
Remote: http://www.motherwave.com/crazy.html
Found/Read: 09/09/2002


Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approachbook[AIMA] Title: Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach
Author(s): Stuart Russell, Peter Norvig.
Remote: http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~russell/aima.html
Found/Read: 09/09/2002
Comments: Textbook for course


link[PFAI] Title: The Philosophy and Future of AI
Author(s): Mark Humphrys
Remote: http://www.compapp.dcu.ie/~humphrys/philosophy.html
Found/Read: 09/09/2002
Comments: Some random notes on AI


link[DOF] Title: Dictionary of philiosphy
Remote: http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~philos/MindDict/materialism.html
Found/Read: 09/09/2002


link[LLAI] Title: Limits and Limitations of Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Remote: http://www.geocities.com/scimah/index.html
Found/Read: 09/09/2002


link[GDCAI] Title: Google Directory > Computers > Artificial Intelligence
Remote: http://directory.google.com/Top/Computers/Artificial_Intelligence/
Found/Read: 09/09/2002


link[MMIAI] Title: Mind and Machine: Introduction to Artificial Intelligence
Remote: http://physics.syr.edu/courses/modules/MM/ai/ai.html
Rating: a fisha fisha fisha fisha sad fish - Found/Read: 09/09/2002
Comments: Excellent Page.


link[WANN] Title: Neural Networks: What are Neural Networks?
Publication Date: (1997) - Publisher: Battelle Memorial Institute.
Remote: http://www.emsl.pnl.gov:2080/proj/neuron/neural/what.html
Found/Read: 09/2002


link[OCRNB] Title: Naive Bayes Classifer Source
Remote: http://algoval.essex.ac.uk/algoval/ocr/function/NaiveBayesExample.html
Found/Read: 19/09/2002
Comments: Java based Naive Bayes OCR source code.


link[DCNBP] Title: An analysis of data characteristics that affect naive Bayes performance
Author(s): Irina Rish, Joseph Hellerstein, Jayram Thathachar
Publisher: Watson Research Center.
Local: misc/icml01.pdf
Remote: http://www.research.ibm.com/PM/icml01.pdf
Found/Read: 19/09/2002


link[ESNBC] Title: An empirical study of the naive Bayes classifier
Author(s): I. Rish
Publisher: Watson Research Center.
Local: misc/Rish.pdf
Remote: http://www.intellektik.informatik.tu-darmstadt.de/~tom/IJCAI01/Rish.pdf
Found/Read: 19/09/2002


^Top^

Honours | Calendar | References (Normal) (Formal) (Quick) (Links only) (BibTeX) (Light Toggle)

Can't load References, perhaps try the Lite version.