LAWS@SRI-AI.ARPA (04/21/85)
From: AIList Moderator Kenneth Laws <AIList-REQUEST@SRI-AI> AIList Digest Saturday, 20 Apr 1985 Volume 3 : Issue 49 Today's Topics: Bindings - HPP now Stanford Knowledge Systems Laboratory, Recent Articles - AI Report & Survey, Robotics - Occupational Fatality, AI Literature - AI Journals & Mathematical People, Request - NCARAI Seminar Series, Workshop - AI and Statistics ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed 17 Apr 85 15:43:54-PST From: Bruce Buchanan <BUCHANAN@SUMEX-AIM.ARPA> Subject: STANFORD KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS LABORATORY *** NOTICE OF NAME CHANGE *** HEURISTIC PROGRAMMING PROJECT --> KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS LABORATORY COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT STANFORD UNIVERSITY Upon entering our third decade of AI research, the group formerly known as the DENDRAL Project (1965-1972) and the Heuristic Programming Project (1972-1984) announces the creation of the Knowledge Systems Laboratory (KSL). The overall research directions will remain the same but scientific direction and administration will be distributed among the five collaborating, but distinct, subgroups listed below. A central KSL administration will coordinate activities among the subgroups and between the KSL and outside agencies, corporations, and the university. Thomas Rindfleisch will serve as Director of the KSL. 1. The Heuristic Programming Project group, Prof. Edward A. Feigenbaum, principal investigator. The current foci of the HPP include: studies of blackboard systems, machine and system architectures for concurrent symbolic processing, and models for knowledge discovery. Executive Director: Robert Engelmore. Research scientists: Harold Brown, Bruce Delagi, Peter Friedland, H.Penny Nii, and Byron Davies. Consulting Professor: Richard Gabriel. 2. The HELIX Group, Prof. Bruce G. Buchanan, principal investigator. The main foci of this group are machine learning, transfer of expertise, and problem solving. Other faculty and research scientists are Paul Rosenbloom, James Brinkley, William Clancey, and Barbara Hayes-Roth. 3. The Medical Computer Science Group, Prof. Edward H. Shortliffe, principal investigator. Research on and application of AI to medical problems. Research scientist: Larry Fagan. 4. The Logic Group, Prof. Michael R. Gensereth, principal investigator. Research on formal reasoning and introspectivie systems. Research scientist: Matt Ginsberg. 5. The Symbolic Systems Resources Group, Thomas C. Rindfleisch, director. Research on and operation of computing resources for AI research, including the SUMEX facility. Asst. Director: William J. Yeager. Address correspondence to: Knowledge Systems Laboratory Computer Science Dept. Stanford University 701 Welch Rd., Bldg. C Palo Alto, CA 94304 ------------------------------ Date: 5 Apr 1985 10:28-EST From: leff%smu.csnet@csnet-relay.arpa Subject: Contents, AI Report The Artificial Intelligence Report, April 1985, Volume 2 no. 4 "FDA Looks at Medical Software" describes a move within the FDA to classify medical software (including medical expert systems) as medical devices subject to improvement "The NSF Supercomputer Centers" "Sun Microsystems" announced the availability of the following AI products for their workstations: Quintus Prolog, Lucid Common Lisp, Software Architecture and Engineering Inc.s' Knowledge Engineering System, Smart System Technology's Duck. Also includes information on Sun's philosophy with respect to AI and some prices for some of their products and general corporate aims. "Teknowledge joins FMC" describes investments by FMC and others in Teknowledge. "A $50 Million Give Away" describes HP's planned donations to Universities for AI work. "A Commerical AI Forum" describes a forum being sponsored by the Gartner Group. "The Japanese AI Market" describes work by Nichiman Co in importing Symbolics 3600 machines and other AI software to Japan. "Expo 85: Tsukuba Japan" States that the American pavillion in Japan (whose theme is AI) has good technical information but lacks the flash and glitz of Japanese exhibits. Announcements of AI products for the IBM PC Logicware announced availability of PC/MProlog which is execution compatible with unspecified DEC and IBM mainframe computers. Artelligence of Dallas, Texas is selling a PC version of OPS5 called OPS5+($3,000) California Intelligence announces XSYS, an expert system shell, for $1000. (It is similar to the SeRIES-PC system developed at Stanford) KDS Corporation announced KDS AUTOLOGIC Review of the NATO Advanced Study Institute workshop. These are available in Robotics and Artificial Intelligence, volume 11 of NATO ASI Series, series F- Computer and Systems Sciences published by Springer VErlag Review of IEEE Conference on Artificial Intelligence Conference, Dec 5-7 1985. They are available from IEEE Computer Society (order no 624) Review of Artificial Intelligence in Maintenance, sponsored by the Department of Defense October 4-6 1983. ------------------------------ Date: 3 Apr 1985 09:37-EST From: leff%smu.csnet@csnet-relay.arpa Subject: Recent Articles Datamation, April 1, 1985 Volume 31 no 7 Reader's Forum - Hacker meets Star War's. This was written by John M. Morris of Illinois Institute of Technology Research Institute in Rome New York. He claims that IIT has developed a "set of software metrics -- measurements of such things as the complexity of programs -- for use with LISP programs." They also found that "AI programs can meet commercial software standards without neglecting the hackers' creative artistic spirit." and that the usual software development cycle can be modified for AI development. No documentation or references for these claims were provided in the article. ____________________________________________________________________________ Infoworld, January 28, 1985 Volume 7, Issue 4 Review of Exsys, an expert system based on a taxonomic approach Rating: two out of a possible four diskettes. Performance: good Documentation: fair Ease of Use: Fair Error Handling: Excellent Support: Good Pages 43-44 Review of Expert Ease: This is superseded by a review of a newer release of their product which I summarized earlier Review of Expert Choice: page 45-50 This is a decision support system based on Professor Saaty's "Analytic Hierarchy Process" Rating: two out of four possible diskettes performance: good documentation: good ease of use: fair error handling: Excellent support: four ____________________________________________________________________________ Electronics Week, February 11, 1985, page 45 "Upstart Vendor Makes Waves in Japn's Robot Market" Talks about Dainichi Kiko Co. which is a small company that is growing very fast by using novel control circuits to compensate for the weight of the robot arm when moving it, and by selling turnkey systems. ____________________________________________________________________________ Computer World, April 1, 1985 page 45 Article describing Arthur D. Little's efforts in Artificial Intelligence applications, particularly to data processing. ____________________________________________________________________________ Electronics Week December 17, 1984 page 17-18 "AI Transforms CAD/CAM to CIM" describes efforts by CAM-I to integrate engineering work-stations and automated factories using expert systems. Also describes work by Westinghouse Electric Corp to apply expert systems to hybrid circuits, magnetic dervices, printed circuits, array products. Computervision has a system which refers to past experiences and classifies parts into categories. They did not call the system AI based at the time but it can now be considered an AI system. ____________________________________________________________________________ Computer Products March 1985 Intellimac announces the following systems for its IN/7000 series ADA development super-minis: Common Lisp, Lisp-To-ADA Translater, an expert system shell, a CAI system for LISP ____________________________________________________________________________ Computer Products Page 34 March 1985 Frey Associates Inc. announces Themis V1.1 that provides a natural language in.terface to ORACLE Relational Database and VAX DATATRIEVE. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 8 Apr 85 10:35:51 cst From: Richard Smith <smith%umn.csnet@csnet-relay.arpa> Subject: Occupational Fatality Associated with a Robot Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report Center for Disease Control, Atlanta Vol. 34, No. 11, March 22, 1985. "On July 21, 1984, a 34-year-old male worker in Michigan was operating an automated die-casting system that included an industrial robot. At approximately 1:15 p.m., he was found pinned between the back end of the robot and a 4-inch-diameter steel safety pole used to restrict undesired arm movement by the robot. The robot stalled, applying sustained pressure to the chest of the operator, who experienced cardiopulmonary arrest... the worker was admitted comatose to a local hospital, where he died 5 days later." The report provides additional details. Apparently the operator climbed around the safety bars and was trying to clean up metal scrap on the floor when he got pinned by the robot. The operator was thought to be fairly competent, but had a practice of sneaking into the robot's work envelope every so often. He evidently didn't anticipate the motions of the back of the robot as well as he anticipated the gripper motion. The company has since installed a chain link fence around the work cell. According to the CDC this is the first robot-caused fatality in the U.S. The report also mentions that 2 fatalities have occured in Japan. Robot related injuries occur most often while a robot is being programmed or repaired, unlike this case. Back issues of M&M Weekly Report are availible from the publisher, Massachusetts Medical Society, Waltham, MA. ------------------------------ Date: Wed 3 Apr 85 12:08:37-PST From: C.S./Math Library <LIBRARY@SU-SCORE.ARPA> Subject: New Journals In The Math/CS Library [Forwarded from the Stanford bboard by Laws@SRI-AI.] The following is a list of some of [Stanford Library's] more recent subscription purchases: Abacus Computers and Artificial Intelligence (Czechoslovakia) Expert Systems: the international journal of knowledge engineering ICOT Journal Digest: Fifth Generation Computer Systems Integration: the VLSI Journal Journal of Automated Reasoning Journal of Logic Programming Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing Journal of Pascal, Ada & Modula-2 Macworld Tech Journal; for IBM Personal Computer Users Technology and Sciences of Information; cover to cover translation of Technique et Science Informatiques HL ------------------------------ Date: Wed 17 Apr 85 12:04:19-PST From: C.S./Math Library <LIBRARY@SU-SCORE.ARPA> Subject: Mathematical People--New Book in the Math/CS Library [Forwarded from the Stanford bboard by Laws@SRI-AI.] Mathematical People by Albers and Alexanderson (QA28.M37 1985) has arrived in the Math/CS Library and is on the new books shelf for sign-ups. This is the book that includes interviews with Don Knuth, Persi Diaconis, and George Polya all of Stanford. Interviews of the following people are also included: Garrett Birkhoff, David Blackwell, Shing-shen Chern, John Horton Conway, H. S. M. Coxeter, Paul Erdos, Martin Gardner, Ronald L. Graham, Paul R.Halmos, Peter J. Hilton, John Kemeny, Morris Kline, Benoit Mandelbrot, Henry O. Pollak, Mina Rees, Constance Reid, Herbert Robbins, Raymond Smullyan, Olga Taussky-Todd, Albert W. Tucker, Stanislaw M. Ulam, and Reminiscences of Solomon Lefschetz by Albert W. Tucker. Harry Llull ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Apr 85 09:08:24 est From: Dennis Perzanowski <dennisp@nrl-aic> Subject: NCARAI Seminar Series CALL FOR PAPERS The Navy Center for Applied Research in Artificial Intelli- gence (NCARAI), a branch of the Naval Research Laboratory located in Washington, D.C., sponsors a bimonthly seminar series. Seminars are held on alternate Mondays throughout the year (except summers). The seminars are intended to pro- mote interaction among individuals from the military, governmental, industrial and academic communities. Topics span the various research areas and issues in Artifi- cial Intelligence with special interests in: *Expert Systems *Knowledge Representation *Learning *Logic programs and automated reasoning *Natural Language processing *New generation architectures Presentations last for approximately one hour, followed by a fifteen-minute question-and-answer session. Speakers in- vited from the academic community are provided with a per diem and an honorarium. Please send 3 copies of a 200-250 word abstract to: Dennis Perzanowski Navy Center for Applied Research in Artificial Intelligence Naval Research Laboratory -- Code 7510 Washington, DC 20375-5000 ARPANET address: DENNISP@NRL-AIC.ARPA Telephone: (202) 767-2686 (AV) 297-2686 The committee will consider new and interesting work, as well as promising work in progress. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 9 Apr 85 17:15:24 pst From: gluck@SU-PSYCH (Mark Gluck) Subject: Workshop - AI and Statistics WORKSHOP ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND STATISTICS April 10-12, 1985 AT&T Conference Center, Princeton, NJ General Chair: William Gale AT&T Bell Laboratories Murray Hill, NJ Annie G. Brooking The Analysis Phase in the Development of Knowledge- Based Systems Keith A. Butler Use of Psychometric Tools for Knowledge Acquisition: James E. Corter A Case Study Thomas Ellman Representation of Statistical Computation: Toward Expert Systems with a Deeper Understanding of Statistics Douglas Fisher Methods of Conceptual Clustering and their Relation to Pat Langley Numerical Taxonomy John Fox Decision Making and Uncertainty in Knowledge-Based Systems William B. Gale STUDENT Phase I - A report on Work in Progress David J. Hand Patterns in Statistical Strategy Stephen C. Hora Learning Rates in Supervised and Unsupervised Intelligent Systems Laveen N. Kanal Problem Solving Methods for Pattern Recognition G. R. Dattratreya R. Wayne Oldford Implementation and Study of Statistical Strategy Stephen C. Peters Robert I. Phelps Artificial Intelligence Approaches in Statistics P. B. Musgrove Darryl Pregibon A Do-It-Yourself Guide to Statistical Strategy Steven Salzberg Pinpointing Good Hypotheses with Heuristics D.J. Spiegelhalter A Statistical View of Uncertainty in Expert Systems Ronald A. Thisted Representing Statistical Knowledge and Search Strategies for Expert Data Analysis Systems ------------------------------ End of AIList Digest ********************