Artificial Intelligence 0. Course Overview
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Transcript Artificial Intelligence 0. Course Overview
Artificial Intelligence
0. Course Overview
Course V231
Department of Computing
Imperial College, London
© Simon Colton
Designed Especially for You
Designed for MSc. Conversion students
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Broad coverage of topics
Less background in computing, e.g., logic
Attempt to avoid complex maths
Focus on algorithmic details
Quick Questions about AI
What is Artificial Intelligence?
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Stupid question (because AI is young)
Quick answer: getting machines to do smart things
Where did Artificial Intelligence originate?
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AI is not “owned” by computer science
Origins in (at least): maths, logic, computer science,
philosophy, psychology, cognitive science, biology
Understanding intelligence one of the oldest questions
Turing introduced AI notions in his seminal work
“AI” coined by John McCarthy in Dartmouth, 1956
Common Misconceptions
From popular science/science fiction/media
Robots will take over the earth
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Computers will never be intelligent
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Roger Penrose
Humans will choose to become computers
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Kevin Warwick
Ray Kurzweil
Computers will evolve to be human
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Mark Jeffery
Course Aims
Assumption:
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You will be going off to industry/academia
Will come across computational problems
requiring intelligence (in humans and computers) to solve
Two aims:
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Give you an understanding of what AI is
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Aims, abilities, methodologies, applications, …
Equip you with techniques for solving problems
By writing/building intelligent software/machines
Course Overview: four areas
AI fundamentals
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Automated reasoning (deduction)
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Socrates was mortal
Machine learning (induction)
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Characterisations, terminology, methodologies
Representation and search
Application to game playing
Every man has died, so we all die
Evolutionary algorithms
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Breed your own programs
Administration
Our details
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Dr. Simon Colton (sgc@doc), room 407c
Dr. Jeremy Gow (jgow@doc), room 407
Course details
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Lectures: Mon 12pm (144), Tues 11am (144)
Tutorials:Tues 12pm (not first week), room 144
One assessed practical
Game playing using Prolog
Notes and slides here:
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http://www.doc.ic.ac.uk/~sgc/teaching/v231/
Additional links in online lecture notes
Previous SOLE Evaluation
“Best lecturer ever”
“Terrible lecturer”
“The lecturer was scruffy!”
“Lectures tended to over-run”
“Too much material”