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C00002 00002 1. Here is an approximate subdivision of AI.
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1. Here is an approximate subdivision of AI.
a. Heuristics. Search through spaces of alternatives.
b. Representation. What kinds of facts are there that
programs should know and how should they be represented in the
memory of the computer.
c. Learning. This comprises generalization from experience
and also compiling rapid running programs from independently
received pieces of information. This last probably corresponds to
what is now called automatic programming.
d. Sense and motor activities. Vision, speech, and
manipulation.
2. Successes in AI
a. Understanding of how far tree search on straightforward
representations can go in playing chess and proving theorems.
b. Showing that it is possible and necessary to go beyond
the classification problem and methods in perceiving the world
through the senses.
c. Identification of the representation problems as the key
to further progress.
3. Areas of research springing from AI.
a. Present approaches to speech.
b. Present approaches to natural language.
c. Sophisticated manipulation for applied purposes.
4. AI has disposed of the idea that the main problems are
probabilistic, it has disposed of Chomskian linguistics, classical
pattern recognition, and the automaton model of the world.
5. Tools produced by AI include list processing languages which is
being used in non-AI type symbolic calculation, it is partially
responsible for the development of time-sharing in that my own
contribution to time-sharing was motivated by needing it for AI
research. The same is true of my and some others contributions to
mathematical theory of computation.
6. Major intellectual advances contributed by AI are
a. My approach to epistemology, although I cheerfully admit
that this approach is not widely accepted yet.
b. The use of information processing models in cognitive
psychology.
c. The procedure approach of the M.I.T. AI group to the
representation of information.
d. Showing the way to go beyond Chomskian linguistics and
really put the semantics in.
e. The development of mathematical logical systems within
which one can work rather than systems which are good only for
proving metatheorems about. This advance is also not widely
recognized yet.
7. I don't think that AI as a field has 3 to 5 year goals, although
ARPA might have such goals in AI and particular projects may have
such goals. My main personal goal is to understand the
representation problem better, because I still feel it has long been
the major bottleneck to large advances toward human-like
intelligence.
Our project has goals as described in our latest proposal.
I believe we can do vision well enough to assemble and to navigate.
I believe that in five to ten years we shall be able to represent
the information in a simple narrative like a newspaper story well
enough so that a program will be able to draw the obvious
consequences from such a narrative. I have been interested in this
problem since 1958, and my present optimism stems from the fact that
many people such as Schenk and Winograd and Sandewall are converging
on this problem.
8. Medium term goals (10 to 20 years) include:
a. The ability to automatically generate programs of
reasonable efficiency compiled from common sense information about a
subject matter and a simply stated goal.
b. The ability for a walking or driving machine to navigate
safely in a human environment. (Flying is much easier). Human
level ability to build objects from materials given suitable
instructions.
These are ambitious goals for this time frame and might not
be met. I believe they would be met if my understanding of the
required intellectual mechanisms is correct and becomes accepted.
The long term goal is to make programs which are
intellectually as capable as people and therefore much more capable.
I do not have a set of ideas for intellectual mechanisms adequate to
achieve this level of performance. Therefore, I cannot put a
time-scale on this, because I cannot predict when someone will have
the necessary ideas. However, there are smarter people than me, and
I am reasonably confident that intelligence is understandable and
will be understood.
As you know, Steve, I will be debating Lighthill next week,
and the state of my preparation will be represented by documents
light.*[2,jmc]. These documents will be in their final state by
Thursday night, but there is a lot of redundancy now. Your set of
questions has been helpful in my preparation. I don't mind if you
show this memo to people in its present state, but I imagine I could
think of more important points if motivated and given time.