Artificial Intelligence in Design '91John S. Gero Artificial Intelligence in Design '91 is a collection of 47 papers from the First International Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Design held at Edinburgh in June 1991. The papers in this book are grouped into 13 headings, starting with a background of AI design systems and to which extent AI that results from being used as planning tool be applied to quality-oriented design processes in architecture. A constraint-driven approach to object-oriented design is also shown on real-world objects. The use of CADSYN in the structural design of buildings is examined, along with design-dependent knowledge and design-independent knowledge. Discussions on empowering designers with integrated design environments are given whereby design objects may be retrieved from catalogues without requiring users to form queries. Mention is given to automated adjustment of parameter values frequently used in computer routine applications. The book also introduces the Computer Aided Design (CAD) as applied to architecture. Design representation using data models, non-monotonic reasoning in design, and the cognitive aspects of design using empirical studies are discussed. Topics of the industrial applications of AI in design, such as the needed steps to develop a successful AI-based tool, and a review of the Castlemain Project and telecommunication distribution networks follow. This book is suitable for programmers, computer science students, and architects and engineers who use computers in their line of work |
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Page 283
... selection process can be conceived as comprising two kinds of rationalities , teleological and causal , as follows : Teleological Rationality : the rationality on the selection of the functional composition of design . Causal ...
... selection process can be conceived as comprising two kinds of rationalities , teleological and causal , as follows : Teleological Rationality : the rationality on the selection of the functional composition of design . Causal ...
Page 512
... selected because it would cost too much if executed immediately . Two selection criteria have been identified : cognitive cost and importance of the action . First action selection criterion : Cognitive cost For each proposed action ...
... selected because it would cost too much if executed immediately . Two selection criteria have been identified : cognitive cost and importance of the action . First action selection criterion : Cognitive cost For each proposed action ...
Page 820
... selection . Gero et al . ( 1988 ) describe how prototypes may be selected based on whether they possess certain ... selection the search value of the alternative prototypes available must be estimated , where the search value in the ...
... selection . Gero et al . ( 1988 ) describe how prototypes may be selected based on whether they possess certain ... selection the search value of the alternative prototypes available must be estimated , where the search value in the ...
Contents
Artificial intelligence paradigms and design | ix |
Can planning be a research paradigm in architectural design? | 23 |
Constraintbased reasoning in design | 77 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
abstraction action activity algorithm alternative analysis application approach architecture artifact Artificial Intelligence attributes automated behavior blackboard blackboard system CAAD CAD system case-based reasoning circuit design complex components computer-aided design concept connectionism connectionist constraints construction context database decisions decomposition defined definition described design knowledge design object design problem design process design solution design system design task design variables design-dependent device domain experts domain knowledge domain theory drug design elements evaluation example expert system function geometric Gero goal heuristics hierarchy ICADS identify implemented inference input instance instantiated integrated interaction interface knowledge base knowledge representation knowledge sources knowledge-based learning mechanism method modified module nodes object-oriented operation optimisation parameters performance pharmacophore Prolog qualitative relationships represented rules selection semantic space specific structure sub-system truth maintenance system values