Discovery Systems

Cyrano is a thoughtful reimplementation of Lenat's controversial Eurisko program, designed to perform automated discovery and concept formation in a variety of technical fields. The 'thought' in the reimplementation has come from several directions: an appeal to basic principles...

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Main Author: Haase, Kenneth W., Jr.
Language:en_US
Published: 2004
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/6450
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author Haase, Kenneth W., Jr.
author_facet Haase, Kenneth W., Jr.
author_sort Haase, Kenneth W., Jr.
collection MIT
description Cyrano is a thoughtful reimplementation of Lenat's controversial Eurisko program, designed to perform automated discovery and concept formation in a variety of technical fields. The 'thought' in the reimplementation has come from several directions: an appeal to basic principles, which led to identifying constraints of modularity and consistency on the design of discovery systems; an appeal to transparency, which led to collapsing more and more of the control structure into the representation; and an appeal to accountability, which led to the explicit specification of dependencies in the concept formation process. The process of reimplementing Lenat's work has already revealed several insights into the nature of Eurisko-like systems in general; these insights are incorporated into the design of Cyrano. Foremost among these new insights is the characterization of Eurisko-like systems (shich I call inquisitive systems) as search processes which dynamically reconfigure their search space by the formation of new concepts and representations. This insight reveals requirements for modularity and 'consistency' in the definition of new concepts and representations.
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spelling mit-1721.1/64502019-04-12T08:30:49Z Discovery Systems Haase, Kenneth W., Jr. Cyrano is a thoughtful reimplementation of Lenat's controversial Eurisko program, designed to perform automated discovery and concept formation in a variety of technical fields. The 'thought' in the reimplementation has come from several directions: an appeal to basic principles, which led to identifying constraints of modularity and consistency on the design of discovery systems; an appeal to transparency, which led to collapsing more and more of the control structure into the representation; and an appeal to accountability, which led to the explicit specification of dependencies in the concept formation process. The process of reimplementing Lenat's work has already revealed several insights into the nature of Eurisko-like systems in general; these insights are incorporated into the design of Cyrano. Foremost among these new insights is the characterization of Eurisko-like systems (shich I call inquisitive systems) as search processes which dynamically reconfigure their search space by the formation of new concepts and representations. This insight reveals requirements for modularity and 'consistency' in the definition of new concepts and representations. 2004-10-04T14:56:55Z 2004-10-04T14:56:55Z 1986-04-01 AIM-898 http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/6450 en_US AIM-898 1614725 bytes 1261121 bytes application/postscript application/pdf application/postscript application/pdf
spellingShingle Haase, Kenneth W., Jr.
Discovery Systems
title Discovery Systems
title_full Discovery Systems
title_fullStr Discovery Systems
title_full_unstemmed Discovery Systems
title_short Discovery Systems
title_sort discovery systems
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/6450
work_keys_str_mv AT haasekennethwjr discoverysystems