Topics in Expert System Design: Methodologies and ToolsC. Tasso, G. Guida Elsevier, 2014 M06 28 - 447 pages Expert Systems are so far the most promising achievement of artificial intelligence research. Decision making, planning, design, control, supervision and diagnosis are areas where they are showing great potential. However, the establishment of expert system technology and its actual industrial impact are still limited by the lack of a sound, general and reliable design and construction methodology.This book has a dual purpose: to offer concrete guidelines and tools to the designers of expert systems, and to promote basic and applied research on methodologies and tools. It is a coordinated collection of papers from researchers in the USA and Europe, examining important and emerging topics, methodological advances and practical experience obtained in specific applications. Each paper includes a survey introduction, and a comprehensive bibliography is provided. |
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Page 41
... language record of the COMPASS expert knowledge, is approximately 200 pages long. In field uses, COMPASS has displayed performance comparable to (and, in some cases, better than) that of domain experts, and significantly better than ...
... language record of the COMPASS expert knowledge, is approximately 200 pages long. In field uses, COMPASS has displayed performance comparable to (and, in some cases, better than) that of domain experts, and significantly better than ...
Page 50
... languages and techniques, such as flow charts, pseudo-code, PDL (program design languages) and data flow, were developed to deal with structured programming languages that assume sequential Control and use a small number of subroutines ...
... languages and techniques, such as flow charts, pseudo-code, PDL (program design languages) and data flow, were developed to deal with structured programming languages that assume sequential Control and use a small number of subroutines ...
Page 51
... languages and enables call-ins to its capabilities. No tool can adequately predict the needs of a specific application. Thus, the flexibility to call-out to a more general purpose, though more primitive language is desirable. Similarly ...
... languages and enables call-ins to its capabilities. No tool can adequately predict the needs of a specific application. Thus, the flexibility to call-out to a more general purpose, though more primitive language is desirable. Similarly ...
Page 52
... language (CRL), problem-solving languages (CRL-OPS and CRLPROLOG), interface tools to assist in the development of user applications, and programming workbenches.” Many applications, primarily in engineering, manufacturing, and field ...
... language (CRL), problem-solving languages (CRL-OPS and CRLPROLOG), interface tools to assist in the development of user applications, and programming workbenches.” Many applications, primarily in engineering, manufacturing, and field ...
Page 53
... languages, inheritance down a classification hierarchy is supported. Less typical, and perhaps unique, is that CRL ... language based on a Horn clause representation. Such clauses may be procedurally interpreted as rules, or in the ...
... languages, inheritance down a classification hierarchy is supported. Less typical, and perhaps unique, is that CRL ... language based on a Horn clause representation. Such clauses may be procedurally interpreted as rules, or in the ...
Contents
25 | |
45 | |
Development tools | 179 |
Knowledge acquisition and modeling | 231 |
Validation and evaluation | 351 |
Further reading | 417 |
A STRUCTURED BIBLIOGRAPHY | 419 |
LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS | 437 |
AUTHOR INDEX | 441 |
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Topics in Expert System Design: Methodologies and Tools Giovanni Guida,Carlo Tasso Snippet view - 1989 |
Common terms and phrases
abstract activities AI Magazine application approach Artificial Intelligence attribute backward chaining behavior Breuker Building Expert Systems cognitive complete components Computer concepts conceptual model construction context cycle decision defined described diagnosis domain expert domain knowledge environment example Expert System Design expert system development expert system evaluation expert system technology expertise facilities Figure formal function goal graphical heuristics identified implementation important inductive inference input instance integrated interaction interface KADS KCML knowledge acquisition knowledge base Knowledge Craft knowledge elicitation knowledge engineer knowledge representation knowledge-based systems KRITON language layer LISP machine machine learning metaclasses methodology methods model-based reasoning MYCIN objects operations OPS5 output performance phase problem solving Proc programming Prolog protocol analysis prototype refinement relations reliability repertory grid represent requirements rule-based rules selection shells software engineering solution specific strategies structure task techniques Topics in Expert types validity values