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===[[Turing Test]]===
===[[Turing Test]]===
How many of these still apply?
#Variations on the test: Define "restricted" vs. "unrestricted".
#Variations on the test: Define "restricted" vs. "unrestricted".
#There are two broken or missing citations. Research is needed.
#There are two broken or missing citations. Research is needed.

Revision as of 11:35, 29 March 2009

Pages
  • McCorduck, Pamela (2004), Machines Who Think (2nd ed.), Natick, Massachusetts: A. K. Peters, ISBN 1-5688-1205-1
Templates
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Artificial Intelligence

copy these out from textbook survey

Provide a down-to-earth example in the second paragraph.

  1. This could use some copy editing.
  2. Add more historical information: notably the victory of neats with the work of Judea Pearl and the agent model
  3. Crevier, p. 254: The scoiecty of mind as scruffy. Great quote from Dennett about the essence of "scruffiness."

Do we also need an article with the the title "Adversarial search"?

  1. Tie this to the definitions given in the textbook you bought.

See User:CharlesGillingham/AI effect

Fix weird section mentioning "Strong AI". Rename it Chatterbots and the Turing Test And create another Applications of chatterbots

If this ever becomes an article:

Human beings use symbolic processes to solve problems, reason, speak and write, learn and invent. Over the past 45 years, cognitive psychology has built and tested empirical models of these processes as they are used to perform simple tasks and then more complex ones. The models take the form of computer programs that simulate human behaviour,” Herbert A Simon, who is considered the father of AI, has said.The Financial Express, Take The Right Business Decision With The Help Of AI, posted 15 July 2007, retrieved 17 Aug 2007.

Merges

If these truly are the same thing.

Future of AI, Ethics of AI, Strong AI, AI in fiction

  1. Read last two section of R&N
  1. Poole and Bowman discuss 'Strong AI vs. Weak AI"
  2. Hal plays chess; this was an important test of AI technology
  3. The computer graphics were from the MIT lab.

See notes at Talk:artificial brain

  1. Add this to Singularity
In an interview on C-Net, John McCarthy dismissed Kurzweil's singularity as "nonsense" and added "I don't think Kurzweil has any ideas that have any potential to do that."[1] McCarthy has been a leader in artificial intelligence since it's inception, but unlike many of his contemporaries, has been reluctant to make predicitions.

History of artificial intelligence

  1. Add (referenced) events from History of artificial intelligence
  2. Add other events from crevier and McCorduck
  3. Reference existing events

Philosophy of artificial intelligence

  1. Add section on simulated intelligence vs. real intelligence.
  2. Add Church-Turing, and call Lucas a refutation of that. Use Von Neumann's quote that's in the timeline of artificial intelligence.
  3. Add Kurzweil references. Check Kurzweil's date that machines can simulate a brain.
  4. Give me a better "intelligent agent" definition
  5. Add my new "working definition"
  6. Mention winograd and flores.
  7. Find some legitimate criticism of brain simulation
  8. Mention that "strong AI" is hard to construe and that some think it has bearing on the Dartmouth proposal.
  9. Undo this change: [1]
  10. Additional references (read and use, if you like)


  1. Thought experiment is plagiarized from here; rewrite.
  2. Mention that "strong AI" is hard to construe and that some think it has bearing on the Dartmouth proposal.
  3. Find page number for "syntax is insufficient for semantics"
  4. Look at Hauser 97, p. 1, Hauser 05 p. 8, and Harnad 97 p.1 for more (and better) quotes for the history section.
  5. Find reference where Searle talks about the "background". (May have to read a lot of Searle to find this ... )
  6. Check Kurzweil references
  1. Variations on the test: Define "restricted" vs. "unrestricted".
  2. There are two broken or missing citations. Research is needed.
  3. The sections that describe various colloquia read like press releases. They don't establish the historical significance of these events. I recommend we cut them.
  4. I think we need at least one more "strength", having to do with the fact that Turing's method shelves philosophical discussion. A reliable source that agrees with me needs to be found. Are there other strengths I'm overlooking?
  1. Add philosophical background from Haugaland and Dreyfus
  2. Write empty sections
  1. Rewrite replies that don't read well.
  2. Section on Turing's speculations; should include the fact that this is still called the "Turing Method" in England; find a sourcd on that.

Cognitive science

  1. Use my references and examples -- fill it out, make it clear.

Embodiment articles

General references:

Theory of computation

  1. Talk page: isn't this really a concept that has solely to do with algorithms, named by Lighthill? Is this really a mathematical concept, or a property of certain algorithms. A reference would be nice.
  2. Mark as needing references.
  3. Add text about algorithms that experience combinatorial explosions. Disambiguate and expand.
  1. Write layman's introduction to the implications of NP-Completeness. This could go in Moore's Law, or in Combinatorial explosion or both.

MOJO Project

Read articles in all the old Mojos and randomly fix up music articles.

Innovation and technological change

Read all articles in these categories:

You want to wind up with a reading list based on the sources of these articles.

  1. Re-Add the illustration from Gordon Moore's notes.
  2. Need an opening graphic that shows transistor density but not on a log-log graph. There is data at instructions per second.
  3. Add section on Sociological and Historical Impact of increasing computer power.
  4. Make a graph showing transportation speeds, engine horsepower, etc., for comparison.

Unused References

  • Campbell, Jeremy (1989). The Improbable Machine. Simon and Schuster.
  • Feigenbaum, Edward A. (1983). The Fifth Generation: Artificial Intelligence and Japan's Computer Challenge to the World. Michael Joseph. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |code= ignored (help)
  • Jon Doyle (1983) "A Society of Mind", CMU Department of Computer Science Tech. Report #127.
  • John Markoff, "Brainy Robots Start Stepping Into Daily Life", The New York Times July 18, 2006, Section A, Page 1
  • Harvey Newquist, The Brain Makers, Sams Publishing, 1994. ISBN 0-672-30412-0