Forum for Artificial Intelligence

 

 

ABOUT FAI

The Forum for Artificial Intelligence meets every other Friday at 3pm to discuss topics in artificial intelligence. After the formal talk, we continue our conversation at the Crown and Anchor. All are welcome to attend.

Please send questions or comments to Kenneth Stanley or Tal Tversky.

Full Schedule: 9/2810/2611/211/1611/30

September 28th
3:00pm

ACES 6.304

DISCOURSE MODE:
a linguistically interesting level of text structure

PROF. CARLOTA SMITH [web][email]
CENTENIAL PROFESSOR OF LINGUISTICS
UT DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICS

I'll discuss a level of discourse structure which people intuitively recognize, and which has linguistic correlates that correspond to intuition. Recent work on discourse has emphasized the importance of genre and other pragmatic factors in understanding and structuring discourse. But genre is not the right category for linguistic analysis, because it is pragmatically based. I propose a local level at which particular linguistic forms make a difference. Within a text one recognizes passages of different types, e.g. Narrative, Description, Report, Informative, and Argument- Commentary. These passages represent different discourse modes: they have a particular force and a characteristic cluster of linguistic features and interpretations.

The linguistic properties that characterize the modes are (a) the type of entities that they introduce into the universe of discourse and (b) their principle of advancement, temporal or atemporal. The notion of mode explains variety in texts. Texts of a given genre are not monolithic, but rather have passages of different modes.

October 26th
3:00pm

TAY 3.128

PANDORA REVISITED:
a plea for circumspection in the quest for artificial intelligence

DANIEL S. HAWORTH, M.A.
DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY

The quest for artificial intelligence (AI) is not unlike the tale of Pandora. Curiosity untempered by a clear objective led her to unwittingly unleash a plague of tribulation upon mankind. Pushing the technological boundaries of computational science to make the machine more human-like in the absence of a well defined sense of purpose implies a host of equally unsettling consequences. Using the story of Pandora as a metaphor for what seems to be a case of highly trained minds accepting the means in the headlong rush to develop AI as the justification for a disturbingly ambiguous end, this presentation explores the unsettling implications of intelligence as artifice. It concludes with a call for the members of the computer science community to reach consensus on just what they hope to achieve before they proceed any further.

November 2nd
3:00pm

PAI 3.14

NATURAL LANGUAGE AND INFORMATION RETRIEVAL

PROF. SANDA HARABAGIU [web][email]
UT DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCES

 

November 16th
3:00pm

PAI 3.14

SYMBOLIC MODEL CHECKING FOR CAUSAL DOMAINS

ANUJ GOEL [email]
UT DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL & COMPUTER ENGINEERING

Effective plan specification, solution extraction and plan execution are critical to the ability of single- and multi-agent systems to operate given the dynamism and uncertainties that exist in real-world domains. While much of the traditional planning research has focused on increasing the tractable search space size for fast and efficient planning, the real-world application of domain-independent planners has suffered due to a lack of corresponding advances with respect to new domain representations, metric planning and replanning in dynamic and uncertain environments. This research seeks to extend and enhance planning capabilities by applying symbolic model checking techniques to plan for domains specified using causal language representations.

November 30th
3:00pm

PAI 3.14

AI AND RELIGION

PROF. RAYMOND MOONEY [web] [email]
UT DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCES

PROF. BENJAMIN KUIPERS [web] [email]
UT DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCES

Two scientists who agree on many issues in AI and science generally, disagree fundamentally on the topic of religion.

Is religious faith compatible with good science?

Past Schedules

Spring 2001

Fall 2000

Spring 2000

fai (fA) n. Archaic. [Middle English]: Faith.