Creating Expert Systems for Business and IndustryA practical guide to planning, building, and managing the development of an expert system. Provides comprehensive treatment of expert systems techniques, from basic concepts of knowledge acquisition to managing the expert system development effort. Contains three recent case studies that illustrate the methods used to analyze, design, develop, and manage the creation of an expert system. Provides illustrations, charts, diagrams, examples, and actual code from working systems. |
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Page 86
... effort , you need to determine the manager's interests and con- cerns and be sure they match the effort you have in mind . It's better to reject a potential project than to try to push the project on a management team that really doesn ...
... effort , you need to determine the manager's interests and con- cerns and be sure they match the effort you have in mind . It's better to reject a potential project than to try to push the project on a management team that really doesn ...
Page 267
... effort . Along the way , we summarize some of the most important heuristics that we have introduced in pre- vious chapters . We consider here a generic procedure for manag- ing the development of an expert system . Our overall procedure ...
... effort . Along the way , we summarize some of the most important heuristics that we have introduced in pre- vious chapters . We consider here a generic procedure for manag- ing the development of an expert system . Our overall procedure ...
Page 273
... effort , who will be involved , a budget , and a schedule . The report should also estimate the value of the ... effort before approving the budget for the systems development phase of the project . When a formal report on a proposed ...
... effort , who will be involved , a budget , and a schedule . The report should also estimate the value of the ... effort before approving the budget for the systems development phase of the project . When a formal report on a proposed ...
Contents
Overview | 12 |
3 | 47 |
Developing a List of Potential Applications | 58 |
Copyright | |
47 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Creating Expert Systems for Business and Industry Paul Harmon,Brian Sawyer No preview available - 1990 |
Common terms and phrases
abstract actually allow analysis answer applications approach attribute backward chaining begin building called chapter companies complex consider consultation context context tree conventional cost create database decide decision define determine discuss effect effort engine example existing expert systems facts field Figure forward chaining frame goal handle heuristic hierarchy human inference initial instance interface involved knowledge base language LISP manager memory object Once performance person phase possible printer problem procedural prototype questions reasoning recommendation represent require rules screen selection shows simple slot solve specific speed steps stored story strategy structured systems development task techniques tion usually write