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| | Expert system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | An expert system is a class of computer programs developed by researchers in artificial intelligence during the 1970s and applied commercially throughout the 1980s. |  | | Like an expert system, a wizard is also an interactive computer program that helps a user solve a problem. |  | | In the building and maintenance of the system there are two other roles: the problem domain expert who builds the knowledge base, and a knowledge engineer who assists the experts in determining the representation of their knowledge and who defines the inference technique required to obtain useful problem solving activity. |
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http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expert_system
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| | generation5 - Expert System for Car Maintenance and Troubleshooting |
 | | Expert system is a computer program which simulates the human problem solving and reasoning, and so it must be integrated properly with the right knowledge as human beings have. |  | | Expert system is all about applying human expertise into computer verse, which is based greatly to the integration of human knowledge with the system. |  | | Problem with this version is that it cannot be run correctly on Windows XP or any other latest version of operating system because it will not be compatible, with possibility of errors. |
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http://www.generation5.org/content/2005/CarMaintenance.asp
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| | W505d Course Syllabus |
 | | Expert problem solvers are able to draw on an extensive reservoir of past experiences solving analogous problems in the same domain, and the switch between various methods and strategies (Jonassen, 1997). |  | | Second, expert problem solvers synthesize their rich declarative knowledge to generate a dynamically changing, personal mental model of the system or problem space for solving a particular class of problems. |  | | Problem solving is a process that involves manipulation of or operations on pervious knowledge (Funkhouser and Dennis, 1992). |
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http://www.indiana.edu/~w505d/la/intro/situation.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | The expert’s knowledge base is programmed into the software; each learner’s model is constructed and modified by an algorithm during the learner’s interaction with the system. |  | | Problem-Solving Approach Problem solving is at the core of the IMITS environment. |  | | The problems found in textbooks are typically well structured and are usually solved by the application of an algorithm. |
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http://www.temple.edu/martec/publications/edtechreviews/online_pd.doc
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| | Review: Knowledge Acquisition Principles and Guidelines |
 | | The idea on which expert systems were based was that it would be useful to capture a domain expert's problem-solving expertise in a computer. |  | | Domain expert is an individual who has considerable expertise in the domain in which the expert system is being developed and has the communication skills nessary to relay the information. |  | | On the one hand there is access to a domain expert for knowledge acquisition sessions, but this causes problems and these problems are said to be as a primary development constraint; this could be triggered by geographical distances or physical locations, time demands or cost. |
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http://www.scism.sbu.ac.uk/inmandw/review/knowacq/review/rev5204.html
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| | MC315 Expert Systems and Deductive Databases |
 | | An expert system is a knowledge-based program which imitates the behaviour of a human expert in some problem domain. |  | | Expert systems have increased in popularity over the years, and have been used in such areas as medical diagnosis, mineral exploration, computer system design, and financial credit control. |  | | By the end of the module students will be able to construct simple rule-based expert systems in Prolog, and will be familiar with the semantics of deductive databases and their query languages. |
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http://www.mcs.le.ac.uk/Modules/Year4/MC315.html
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| | Bayfront Technologies Technology |
 | | The problems of system validation, program translation, maintenance programming, systems programming and parallel computation of existing system function will be formulated as problems across the system requirement, architecture, and performance representation. |  | | The concept of domain analysis is introduced to describe the activity of identifying the objects and operations of a class of similar systems in a particular problem domain. |  | | A domain's software components map statements from the domain into other domains which are used to model the objects and operations of the domain. |
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http://www.bayfronttechnologies.com/l02draco.htm
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| | Download Domain Expert full version + crack and keygen (serial) |
 | | An expert system is a class of computer programs developed by researchers in artificial intelligence during the 1970s and applied commercially throughout the 1980s. |  | | Domain Expert Specification of Intelligent Agents Domain Expert Specification of Intelligent Agents Interactive simulation environments with large numbers of intelligent agents are becoming increasingly common. |  | | Supporting the Domain expert in planning domain construction Supporting the Domain expert in planning domain construction This paper discusses work aimed at allowing domain experts to generate a domain model for an AI planning system as part of. |
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http://www.hostatelier.com/cracks/download-domain-expert.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | In reality, the domain expert lacks the computer knowledge to generate the software needed to solve the domain problem. |  | | To reduce the problems, this paper describes an intention-directed modeling (IDM) technique for analysis and design of a software system to be developed; the technique is based on object-oriented technology and is a component of the Intentional Directed Software Engineering Methodology (ID-SEM) (Kuofie, 1999). |  | | The domain expert, instead of the typical software analyst and designer, performs the analysis and the design. |
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http://isedj.org/2/28/Kuofie.txt
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| | AICom paper |
 | | Since a problem is solved by recalling a previous experience suitable for solving the new problem, the case search and matching processes need to be both effective and reasonably time efficient. |  | | In this approach, solving a problem is a classification task, i.e. |  | | Finding a set of matching cases is done by using the problem descriptors (input features) as indexes to the case memory in a direct or indirect way. |
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http://www.iiia.csic.es/People/enric/AICom.html
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| | NCARAI Published Papers and Technical Reports |
 | | Many classification problems must be performed in a timely or time constrained manner. |  | | Testing and evaluation of an expert system are critical parts of the expert system's life-cycle development. |  | | For our problem, that is ship classification, tactical scenarios often dictate the response time required from a system. |
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http://www.aic.nrl.navy.mil/papers/1990/ida.html
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| | Introduction to Expert Systems |
 | | With the shell approach, expert systems representing many different problem domains may be developed and delivered with the same software environment. |  | | An expert system shell consists of a generalized inference engine and user interface designed to work with a knowledge base provided in a specified format. |  | | A problem-domain-specific knowledge base that stores the encoded knowledge to support one problem domain such as diagnosing why a car won't start. |
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http://www.expertise2go.com/webesie/tutorials/ESIntro/ESIntro17.htm
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| | Adventures in .NET programming: August 2004 |
 | | The future of software will be high level tools that the domain expert will be able to use to create a system. |  | | Having a computer programmer in the middle causes a lot of difficulties since the typical programmer will not be able to adsorb the 20 or 30 years of experience that the domain expert has. |  | | Construction has many of the same problems that software development has. |
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http://dfergnet.blogspot.com/2004_08_01_dfergnet_archive.html
(1024 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | An expert system uses domain-specific knowledge to provide "expert quality" performance in a problem domain. |  | | Problem: On your web page, give three ideas (one sentence each) of how you could use expert knowledge in the automatic generation of "poems". |  | | not be solved using traditional computing methods; (6) cooperative and articulate experts exist. |
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http://www.cs.wustl.edu/~loui/313f98/class/2
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| | Designing User Interfaces |
 | | Give examples where the problem domain expert's role would overlap that of the software interface developer. |  | | Give examples where the problem domain expert's role would overlap that of the interaction developer. |  | | Interaction development occurs in the behavioral domain while interface software exists in the constructional domain. |
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http://engr.smu.edu/~diaz/6316.spr98/notes/chapter01.html
(386 words)
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| | Assessing Expert Systems Impact on Users' Jobs |
 | | The results show that the major variables having the most impact on users' jobs are problem importance, problem difficulty, domain expert quality, user satisfaction with the ES, shell quality, and user involvement in ES development. |  | | A comprehensive list of ten major expert systems (ES) related factors likely to affect users' job has been defined, including problem importance, problem difficulty, developer skill, domain expert quality, user characteristics, user satisfaction, shell quality, user involvement, management support, and system usage. |  | | Data were collected on sixty-nine expert systems developed through IBM'S Corporate Manufacturing Expert Systems Project Center in San Jose, California. |
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http://jmis.bentley.edu/articles/v12_n1_p225
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| | CiteULike: Expert Finding Systems for Organizations: Problem and Domain Analysis and the DEMOIR Approach |
 | | We first explore the expert finding problem in depth, review and analyze existing systems in this domain, and suggest a domain model that can serve as a framework for design and development decisions. |  | | Based on our analyses of the problem and solution spaces, we then bring to light the gaps that remain to be addressed. |  | | Expert Finding Systems for Organizations: Problem and Domain Analysis and the DEMOIR Approach |
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http://www.citeulike.org/article/100328
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| | Grammar Based Information Modelling - Hofstede, Proper, van der Weide (ResearchIndex) |
 | | This grammar (the information grammar) should approximate as close as possible the language spoken in the problem domain (the expert language). |  | | Abstract: In this paper information modelling is considered as a process leading to a grammar that describes the communication of an information system with its users. |  | | We first describe how the information grammar is constructed and its relation to the expert language. |
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http://citeseer.lcs.mit.edu/terhofstede94grammar.html
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| | 1.3.3 Problem Owner side: Domain Expert |
 | | He is recognised for his deep knowledge of the domain concerned by the LSCO project. |  | | In charge of explaining the problem and its environment to the LSCO expert. |  | | Participate in the precise scoping of the LSCO Project. |
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http://www.icparc.ic.ac.uk/~zl/chic2/project_lifecycle_1.3.3.html
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| | Software Development>January 2001: Driving Design: The Problem Domain |
 | | The term "problem domain" refers to the area that encompasses real-world things and concepts related to the problem that the system is being designed to solve. |  | | The reason is that we write our use cases in the context of the object model (which we'll discuss in next month's article), instead of from an abstract, pure user viewpoint. |  | | We're following the process detailed in our first book, Use Case Driven Object Modeling with UML (Addison-Wesley, 1999), as we dissect the design of an Internet bookstore. |
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http://www.sdmagazine.com/documents/s%3D735/sdm0101c/0101c.htm
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| | iui98 |
 | | Our evaluation shows that U-TEL can be used effectively by domain experts with or without a background in programming or interface modeling, and that the tool can be a key element in promoting user-centered interface design in model-based systems. |  | | By using U-TEL, domain experts can refine a textual specification of a user task into a basic user-task model suitable for use in model-based interface development environments. |  | | We implemented and evaluated an interactive tool called the User-Task Elicitation Tool (U-TEL) to elicit user-task models from domain experts based on our methodology. |
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http://smi-web.stanford.edu/projects/mecano/pubs/iui98.htm
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| | Refinements from the Problem Domain & Class Weeding - 3 |
 | | Refinements from the Problem Domain & Class Weeding - 3 |  | | Refinements from the Problem Domain & Class Weeding |  | | After a first-cut there are often many incorrect and unnecessary classes that need removal: |
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http://www.cs.adfa.edu.au/~pfe/pptlectures/OODesign/tsld023.htm
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| | Microsoft Network: Global Catalog problem....domain users cannot log in. |
 | | Right now you have 4 servers that are having the same problem when activated as a GC. |  | | I'm sure these are both related to my problem but I just can't determine how... |  | | As far as the second part of that article, that's my problem. |
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http://www.experts-exchange.com/Networking/Microsoft_Network/Q_20917958.html
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| | ITfam.NET domain name problem fixing solutions and domain registration services |
 | | I am not a lawyer, but many doubts regarding legal issues regarding domains can be solved by me if you do not understand all the special computer and domain name jargon. |  | | But I will only solve your problem if you ask me for assistance. |  | | However, I am also solving problems for people who only temporarly provide their admin username and handles or give me authority to work on their behalf as their domain name admin until their problem is solved. |
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http://www.itfam.net/domain-consulting/domain-consultation.html
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| | Domain Expert |
 | | Elbert, age 50, is manager of the organization's computer network, and is considered an expert in network management. |  | | He is happiest when the network does not crash, and when he has satisfied his users' needs. |  | | He is least happy when the network crashes, and when he is given unreasonable schedules for fixing problems. |
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http://www.umcs.maine.edu/~ftp/wisr/wisr7/dpewg/node10.html
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| | Encyclopedia: Problem domain expert |
 | | The term is most frequently used in Artificial Intelligence (AI) in discussions of expert systems. |  | | A problem domain expert is a person who has become extremely able to solve problems in a particular domain, due to his or her training and experience gathered through the years. |  | | Click for other authoritative sources for this topic (summarised at Factbites.com). |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Problem-domain-expert
(100 words)
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| | web host reselling and affordable web site host |
 | | We are the solution to any problem you may have. |  | | Whatever problems or quandries you may have, we not only have the answer, we are the answer. |  | | From the smallest of the one-man businesses to the largest multinational corporations, we have solutions to your problems, and we have supplied resources and answers for every potential problem under the sun. |
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http://www.1fasthost.com/2/0/about_us.html
(681 words)
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| | ITfam.NET domain name problem fixing solutions and domain registration services |
 | | Choosing a domain name can be very difficult, as many of the best and most obvious names are already taken unless you have a very special and long domain name, which will give you fewer visitors dumping in to your site by simply typing a word or name and then ended up on your site. |  | | But be open for other or newer international domains such as.net (mostly for technical or computer),.org (only if not commercial),.biz (for business) or.info. |  | | Short domains are of course easier to remember and dont fill so much on your calling-card. |
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http://www.itfam.net/domain-consulting/domain-selection.html
(384 words)
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