Artificial Intelligence Enters the MarketplaceBy illustrating what it can and cannot do, this book puts Artificial Intelligence in perspecitve. It describes the challenges AI can solve and concentrates on the two hottest AI areas currently under commercial development: natural language processing systems and expert systems. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 15
Page 99
... designed to address different problems . This segmentation has come about as different research systems were converted into tools , but retained the orientation to the original problem they were designed to solve . One common grouping ...
... designed to address different problems . This segmentation has come about as different research systems were converted into tools , but retained the orientation to the original problem they were designed to solve . One common grouping ...
Page 164
... designed to run on a terminal connected to a large IBM computer . This system , like all near - term expert systems , is meant to directly assist its operators , not to operate autonomously . The sys- tem isn't even meant to be the ...
... designed to run on a terminal connected to a large IBM computer . This system , like all near - term expert systems , is meant to directly assist its operators , not to operate autonomously . The sys- tem isn't even meant to be the ...
Page 165
... designed for a narrow application , which makes the acquisition and programming of relevant rules feasi- ble . Also , they rely to varying degrees on information and expertise provided by the users . Even if the banking system has some ...
... designed for a narrow application , which makes the acquisition and programming of relevant rules feasi- ble . Also , they rely to varying degrees on information and expertise provided by the users . Even if the banking system has some ...
Common terms and phrases
achieve AI products AI-based already ambiguity analysis areas artificial intelligence assembly language basic capabilities commercial companies complex computer science computer's concepts conceptual view corporate create customers database decision trees designed difficult electronic entrepreneurs example exist expert systems fact field Fifth-Generation Project Figure firms fourth-generation fourth-generation languages functions funding goals grammar hardware higher-level human ICOT important industry inference engine inference rules Japan Japanese knowledge base knowledge-based LISP machine logical view machine language marketplace meaning natural language processing natural language system noun phrase parallel processing parse tree perform personal computers potential problems processors programming languages PROLOG puter query questions result robots role rule-based approach rule-based programming semantic primitives sentence sequence simply solution solve specific speech recognition start-up stored success syntactic tasks techniques tion today's toolkits understand vendors verb phrase vertical application words