Machine Intelligence
J. E. Hayes(Author)
Clarendon Press
Published on 1. August 1988
Book
Hardback
468 pages
978-0-19-853718-2 (ISBN)
Description
This volume in the "Machine Intelligence" seies maintains the theme of the representation of machine knowledge in a variety of disciplines. There are theoretical papers on computation and logic, on problem-solving and proof, and on applications to logic programming and machine learning. The study marks the twentieth year of the Machine Intelligence Workshops.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Oxford University Press
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
99 figures, 4 tables, bibliography
ISBN-13
978-0-19-853718-2 (9780198537182)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Content
Part 1 Computation and logic: partial models and non-monotonic inference, K.Konolige; equational programming, N.Dershowitz and D.A.Plaisted; beyond LOGLISP - combining functional and relational programming in a reduction setting, J.A.Robinson; concurrent computers architecture for unification operations, J.V.Olfield and C.D.Stormon. Part 2 Deductive problem-solving and proof: integrating decision procedures into heuristic theorem provers - a case study of linear arithmetic, R.S.Boyer and J.S.Moore; a problem simplification approach that generates heuristics for constraint-satisfaction problems, Rina Dechter and J.Pearl; the relation between programming and specification languages with particular reference to Anna, A.D.Mogettrick and J.G.Stell. Part 3 Logic programming tools and applications: YAPES - yet another Prolog expert system, T.B.Niblett; Logicalc - a prolog spreadsheet, F.Kriwaczek; representing legislation as logic programs, M.Sergot. Part 4 Machine learning - methods and instruments: incremental learning of concept descriptions - a method and experimental results, R.E.Reinke and R.S.Michalski; generating expert rules from examples in Prolog, B.Arbab and D.Michie; decision trees and multi-valued attributes, J.R.Quinlan; RuleFactory - a new inductive learning shell, S.Renner; intelligence, architecture and inference - VLSI generalized associative memory devices, D.R.McGregor and J.R.Malone. Part 5 Automating the acquisition of knowledge for complex domains: expert against oracle, A.J.Roycroft; inductive acquisition of chess strategies, S.H.Muggleton; validation of a weather forecasting expert system, S.Zubrick; comparison of ACLS and classical linear methods in a biological application, B.Shepherd et al; automatic synthesis and compression of cardiological knowledge, I.Bratko et al.