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Libro
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- Genere: Libro
- Lingua: Inglese
- Editore: Oxford University Press
- Pubblicazione: 06/1998
COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE
poole d. mackworth a. goebel r
116,98 €
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NOTE EDITORE
This introductory textbook on artificial intelligence (AI) is aimed at junior/senior undergraduate and graduate level students. The theme features an intelligent agent acting in its own environment. This serves to place the core concept of AI in a coherent and cohesive framework, making it easier to teach and learn from. This approach clarifies and integrates representation and reasoning fundamentals and lead the students from simple to complex ideas with clear motivation. The authors have developed A1 representation schemes and describe their use for interesting and popular applications, such as natural language vision, robotics, game playing, and expert systems. Logic plays a crucial roleSOMMARIO
Preface; 1: Computational Intelligence and Knowledge: ; 1.1: What is Computational Intelligence?; 1.2: Agents in the World; 1.3: Representation and Reasoning; 1.4: Applications; 1.5: Overview; 1.6: References and Further Reading; 1.7: Exercises; 2: A Representation and Reasoning System: ; 2.1: Introduction; 2.2: Representation and Reasoning Systems; 2.3: Simplifying assumptions of the initial RRS; 2.4: Datalog; 2.5: Semantics; 2.6: Questions and Answers; 2.7: Proofs; 2.8: Extending the Language with Functional Symbols; 2.9: References and Further Reading; 2.10: Exercises; 3: Using Definite Knowledge: ; 3.1: Introduction; 3.2: Case Study: House Wiring; 3.3: Discussion; 3.5: Case-Study: Repesenting Abstract Concepts; 3.6: Applications in Natural Language Processing; 3.7: References and Further Reading; 3.8: Exercises; 4: Searching: ; 4.1: Why Search?; 4.2: Graph Searching; 4.3: A Generic Searching Algorithm; 4.4: Blind Search Strategies; 4.5: Heuristic Search; 4.6: Refinements to Search Strategies; 4.7: Constraint Satisfaction Problems; 4.8: References and Further Reading; 4.9: Exercises; 5: Representing Knowledge: ; 5.1: Introduction; 5.2: Defining a solution; 5.3: Choosing a Representation Language; 5.4: Mapping a problem to representation; 5.5: Choosing an inference procedure; 5.6: References and Further Reading; 5.7: Exercises; 6: Knowledge Engineering: ; 6.1: Introduction; 6.2: Knowledge-Based System Architecture; 6.3: Meta-Interpreters; 6.4: Querying the User; 6.5: Explanation; 6.6: Debugging Knowledge Bases; 6.7: A Meta-Interpreter with Search; 6.8: Unification; 6.9: References and Further Reading; 6.10: Exercises; 7: Beyond Definite Knowledge: ; 7.1: Equality; 7.2: Integrity Constraints; 7.3: Complete Knowledge Assumption; 7.4: Disjunctive Knowledge; 7.5: Explicit Quantification; 7.6: First-order predicate calculus; 7.7: Modal Logic; 7.8: References and Further Reading; 7.9: Exercises; 8: Actions and Planning: ; 8.1: Introduction; 8.2: Representations of Actions and Change; 8.3: Reasoning with World Representations; 8.4: References and Further Reading; 8.5: Exercises; 9: Assumption-based Reasoning: ; 9.1: Introduction; 9.2: An Assumption-Based Reasoning Framework; 9.3: Default Reasoning; 9.4: Abduction; 9.5: Evidential and Causal Reasoning; 9.6: Algorithms for Assumption-based Reasoning; 9.7: References and Further Reading; 9.8: Exercises; 10: Using Uncertain Knowledge: ; 10.1: Introduction; 10.2: Probability; 10.3: Independence Assumptions; 10.4: Making Decisions Under Uncertainty; 10.5: References and Further Reading; 10.6: Exercises; 11: Learning: ; 11.1: Introduction; 11.2: Learning as choosing the best representation; 11.3: Case-based reasoning; 11.4: Learning as refining the hypothesis space; 11.5: Learning Under Uncertainty; 11.6: Explanation-based Learning; 11.7: References and Further Reading; 11.8: Exercises; 12: Building Situated Robots: ; 12.1: Introduction; 12.2: Robotic Systems; 12.3: The Agent function; 12.4: Designing Robots; 12.5: Uses of Agent models; 12.6: Robot Architectures; 12.7: Implementing a Controller; 12.8: Robots Modelling the World; 12.9: Reasoning in Situated Robots; 12.10: References and Further Reading; 12.11: Exercises; Appendices; A Glossary; B The Prolog Programming Language; B.1 Introduction; B.2 Interacting with Prolog; B.3 Syntax; B.5 Database Relations; B.6 Returning All Answers; B.7 Input and Output; B.8 Controlling Search; C.Some more Implemented Systems; C.1 Bottom-Up Interpreters; C.2 Top-down Interpreters; C.3 A Constraint Satisfaction Problem Solver; C.4 Neural Network Learner; C.5 Partial-Order Planner; C.6 Implementing Belief Networks; C.7 Robot ControllerALTRE INFORMAZIONI
- Condizione: Nuovo
- ISBN: 9780195102703
- Dimensioni: 234x189 mm.
- Formato: Hardback
- Illustration Notes: numerous line figures
- Pagine Arabe: 574