Showing posts with label AI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AI. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2011

Innovative Maze Solving with Mathematica

A typical data structures assignment involves using stacks/queues to generate/solve mazes. This is usually performed by variants of BFS or DFS. As many of my students are currently busy with this task, I thought of presenting them a number of nontraditional solutions incorporating a real world example and some advanced techniques.

There has been a series of posts on a this problem on the Wolfram blog attacking the hedge maze at the Blenheim Palace. The solutions presented started with processing the aerial image acquired from Bing Maps, and proceeded to explore a variety of techniques from standard graph theory to a twisted application of topology.

The series progressed as follows:


Hope you find it interesting!

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Computers and Artificial Intelligence at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina with Dr. Ismail Serageldin

yesterday a bunch of engineering students specially from our departement, attended the Computers and Artificial Intelligence three part series at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina. The department was kind enough to give the day off so all the students are able to attend this big event. It was long and rich with information, a lot of history too but i can say this helped to set the base for the thorough discussion introduced by Dr.Ismail.

The sessions outlined the development of computer systems along side the advancements in communications to the age of the internet and the ICT Revolution. A variety of visions were introduced from purely philosophical to purely technical to show the controversy about the definition of intelligence and the idea of creating intelligent machines and whether it's possible or not.

maybe it's suitable to mention the strongest of both sides of this controversy: the Chinese Room Argument that confines any machine intelligence to a set of predefined rules that can only be enlarged which is not real intelligence, opposed by Raymond Kurzweil who says that computers were able to break any borders that have been set before and predicted that computers will be able to defeat the world champion in chess by 1998 and it happened in 1997, 1 year earlier than predicted. there's more on that in the slides, but without the great presentation given by Dr.Ismail.

I added the links for you here, you can get that and more from Dr. Ismail's website.
Computers and Artificial Intelligence, A three part series - Part 1: Where did our computers come from?
Download Presentation
View Presentation
Computers and Artificial Intelligence, A three part series - Part 2: The Search for Artificial Intelligence
Download Presentation
View Presentation
Computers and Artificial Intelligence, A three part series - Part 3: Humans, Robots And The Future
Download Presentation
View Presentation