Artificial Intelligence

Mackfest

Submitted by yuz on Sun, 2007-07-22 23:12.

I went to Mackfest today to celebrate Alan Mackworth's contributions to AI. It was a lot of fun. I was happy to meet Alan and my sister again. It's been three years since we met last time! AKM is a great professor. I've learned a great deal from him. I also enjoyed the AI text book “Computational Intelligence” he co-authored with David Poole and Randy Goebel. I've read it at least twice.

Without his encouragement, TOS is almost impossible considering it's an after work project for me. With the birth of TOS, came the realization of my true potential. TOS is just the beginning, I know what I'm capable of:-)

I was also impressed by my sister's talk on her PARC robotic research projects. Obviously she's having great fun developing those robotic snakes:-)

Birds in the Mirror

Submitted by yuz on Wed, 2006-09-27 23:56.

An interesting piece of news in today's Vancouver Sun! A woodpecker has been smashing vehicle mirrors on Vancouver's east side. Apparently that woodpecker thought he's looking at another woodpecker in the mirror and he didn't like it a bit!

Cats in the Mirror

Submitted by yuz on Fri, 2006-05-05 00:18.

Tom & Stella 1

I'm half way through this book, “Artificial Minds, by Stan Franklin”. It's a very interesting survey on AI theories. It really makes me thinking a lot. I'm very impressed with author's idea of expressing the mind and intelligence as a matter of degree. I basically agree. But to extend this view to an extreme, even a bacteria can have a very little mind of its own. No, this extreme case is hard for me to accept.

How about cats?

An accountant who plays jazz for a hobby??

Submitted by yuz on Thu, 2005-09-29 21:48.

I've just finished the book "Apprentices of wonder - Inside the Neural Network Revolution". The book was published in 1989. The author is William F. Allman.

This book tells us stories of those pioneers in neural network research and development. The most interesting part of the book is about the fight between symbolic AI and connectionism AI. In the end, the author concluded that neither side won and the future of AI could be some form of the combination of these two. I totally agree with the author on this prediction.

I also liked the part of how our common sense mind is irrational. For example, in order to show that day-to-day human reasoning is not symbolic (totally rely on logic rules), the author gave us a very interesting study by psychologists Daniel Kahneman, Paul Slovic, and Amos Tversky.