GCO3815

Artificial intelligence

T Roberts

6 points
* 4 hours per week
* Second semester
* Gippsland/distance
* Prerequisites: GCO1812
* Corequisites: GCO3811
* Prohibitions: CSC3091, RDT3691

Objectives Students completing this subject should be able to explain the fundamental concepts of artificial intelligence, describe some AI techniques and use Prolog to solve problems and build expert systems.

Synopsis Can machines think? the physical symbol system hypothesis; history of AI; the Turing test; languages of AI; the structure of Prolog; facts, rules, queries; instantiation and backtracking; list processing; depth-first and breadth-first searches; directed searches and the A* algorithm; knowledge representation; frames, scripts; expert systems; learning; genetic algorithms; neural networks; backpropagation. Access to the university's computer systems via modem is compulsory for distance students.

Assessment Examination (3 hours): 70%
* Other assessment modes: 30%

Prescribed texts

Luger G F and Stubblefield W A Artificial intelligence: Structures and strategies for complex problem solving 2nd edn, Benjamin Cummings, 1993

Back to the Engineering Handbook, 1998
Handbook Contents | University Handbooks | Monash University


Published by Monash University, Australia
Maintained by wwwdev@monash.edu.au
Approved by R Chaffey, Faculty of Engineering
Copyright © Monash University 1997 - All Rights Reserved - Caution