80 research outputs found
Machine Perception: What Makes It So Hard for Computers to See?
1 online resource (PDF, page 65-87)Reitman, Walter; Nado, Robert; Wilcox, Bruce. (1978). Machine Perception: What Makes It So Hard for Computers to See?. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/185332
PATTERN RECOGNITION AND PATTERN-DIRECTED INFERENCE IN A PROGRAM FOR PLAYING GO11Support for this work received under NSF grant MCS77-00880 is gratefully acknowledged. We also thank David McArthur, Robert Nado, David Reitman, Judith Reitman, and Henry Rueter for helpful comments on an earlier draft.
IN A PERSONAL INFORMATION RETRIEVAL SYSTEM
This paper is based on a doctoral disserfiation by the first author. Support from the iUationai Science Foundation under ~rmt 'No. DCR71-02038 is gratefully acknowle8ged. Those wishing more mmplete details about system c a d s and imp.tomentatioa should,write the s-d author for a User's Manual
Generic Expert Systems for Management Applications: The Operations Advisor and the Management Advisor
Machines, Architecture, Intelligence, and Knowledge: Changing Conceptions of the Cognitive Psychologist's Data Source
Book Reviews
Book Reviews --Dreyfus, Stuart E. Dynamic programming and the calculus of variations. New York: Academic Press, 1965, 9.00, 248 pp--reviewed by Willard I. Zangwill; --Reitman, Walter R. Cognition and thought: an information-processing approach. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1965, 7.95, 312 pp--reviewed by Horace B. Barlow; --Société Francaise de Recherche Opérationnelle. The possibilities of operations research in developing countries (a symposium held in Paris June 26-28, 1963). Dunod: Paris, 1964, $13.50, 422 pp--reviewed by Jacques R. Fayette. Books Received
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