Register your product to gain access to bonus material or receive a coupon.
covers different ways to represent these functions, such as production systems, reactive agents, logical planners and decision- theoretic systems
explains the role of learning as extending the reach of the designer into unknown environments, and shows how it constrains agent design, favoring explicit knowledge representation and reasoning
includes a thorough, up-to-date and integrated treatment of robotics and vision, written by John Canny and Jitendra Malik, two of the leading exponents in their respective fields
analyzes basic techniques for addressing complexity (use of approximation, compilation, anytime algorithms, hierarchical abstraction) as general sources of power
presents algorithms at three levels of detail — prose descriptions and pseudo-code in the text, and complete Common Lisp programs available by anonymous ftp or on floppy disk
Integrates state-of-the-art AI techniques into intelligent agent designs, using examples and exercises to lead the reader from simple reactive agents to full knowledge-based agents with natural language capabilities. KEY TOPICS: Covers areas that are sometimes under-emphasized--reasoning under uncertainty, learning, natural language, vision and robotics--and explains in detail some of the more recent ideas in the field e.g., simulated annealing, memory-bounded search, global ontologies, dynamic belief networks, neural nets, inductive logic, programming, computational learning theory, and reinforcement learning. MARKET: This highly accessible and well-written, state-of-the-art professional reference is for programmers, software engineers, system administrators, or technical managers who want to learn about or use A.I. techniques and software solutions.
I. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE.
1. Introduction.II. PROBLEM-SOLVING.
3. Solving Problems by Searching.III. KNOWLEDGE AND REASONING.
6. Agents that Reason Logically.IV. ACTING LOGICALLY.
11. Planning.V. UNCERTAIN KNOWLEDGE AND REASONING.
14. Uncertainty.VI. LEARNING.
18. Learning from Observations.VII. COMMUNICATING, PERCEIVING, AND ACTING.
22. Agents that Communicate.VIII. CONCLUSIONS.
26. Philosophical Foundations.