Expert System Applications | ISBN 9783642833144

Expert System Applications

herausgegeben von Leonard Bolc und Michael J. Coombs
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonLeonard Bolc
Beiträge vonC. Bock
Herausgegeben vonMichael J. Coombs
Beiträge vonW.J. Clancey
Beiträge vonJ. Cuena
Beiträge vonP.E. Johnson
Beiträge vonJ.B. Moen
Beiträge vonH. Prade
Beiträge vonR. Sauers
Beiträge vonT. Shibahara
Beiträge vonT. Tanaka
Beiträge vonW.B. Thompson
Beiträge vonJ.K. Tsotsos
Beiträge vonJ. Wang
Buchcover Expert System Applications  | EAN 9783642833144 | ISBN 3-642-83314-4 | ISBN 978-3-642-83314-4

Expert System Applications

herausgegeben von Leonard Bolc und Michael J. Coombs
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonLeonard Bolc
Beiträge vonC. Bock
Herausgegeben vonMichael J. Coombs
Beiträge vonW.J. Clancey
Beiträge vonJ. Cuena
Beiträge vonP.E. Johnson
Beiträge vonJ.B. Moen
Beiträge vonH. Prade
Beiträge vonR. Sauers
Beiträge vonT. Shibahara
Beiträge vonT. Tanaka
Beiträge vonW.B. Thompson
Beiträge vonJ.K. Tsotsos
Beiträge vonJ. Wang
While expert systems technology originated in the United States, its development has become an international concern. Since the start of the DENDRAL project at Stanford University over 15 years ago, with its objective of problem-solving via the automation of actual human expert knowledge, significant expert systems projects have been completed in countries rang ing from Japan to France, Spain to China. This book presents a sample of five such projects, along with four substantial reports of mature studies from North American researchers. Two important issues of expert system design permeate the papers in this volume. The first concerns the incorporation of substantial numeric knowledge into a system. This has become a significant focus of work as researchers have sought to apply expert systems tech nology to complex, real-world domains already subject to statistical or algebraic description (and handled well at some level in numeric terms). A second prominent issue is that of representing control knowledge in a manner which is both explicit, and thus available for inspection, and compatible with the semantics of the problem domain.