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15:37
Shog9 has unfrozen this room.
posted on August 24, 2011

Researchers have developed a new way to generate music and control computers.

posted on August 26, 2011

When your email program or word processor "hangs" it is annoying, you lose messages or have to reboot your computer and start that writing project again if you hadn't saved the text. But, we depending increasingly on computers in almost all walks of life, not least critical systems such as air-traffic control, in which the computer "hanging" can be life threatening.

posted on September 03, 2011

Embedding advertisements in violent video games leads to lower brand recall and negative brand attitudes suggesting advertisers should think twice about including such ads in a media campaign, according to new research.

posted on September 03, 2011

Infants spend their first few months learning to find their way around and manipulating objects, and they are very flexible about it: Cups can come in different shapes and sizes, but they all have handles. So do pitchers, so we pick them up the same way. Now researchers are teaching robots to manipulate objects and find their way around in new environments.

posted on October 04, 2011

Using millions of Twitter subscribers as living "sensors," engineers have found a way to monitor fans' levels of excitement and to keep track of the action in National Football League games -- without ever switching on a TV. SportSense is a computer program the engineers created to analyze NFL fan tweets in real time.

posted on October 11, 2011

Researchers in the UK have a goal to build over 30 more KASPAR robots to help children with autism.

posted on October 12, 2011

After excessively violent events, shoot 'em up games regularly come under scrutiny. In Norway, several first-person shooter games disappeared from the market for a while after the killings. Does intense fighting on a flat screen display also result in aggressive behavior in real life? Researchers have found brain activity patterns in heavy gamers that differed from those of non-gamers.

posted on October 12, 2011

New research finds that the lack of gestural information from both speaker and listener limits successful communication in virtual environments.

 
1 hour later…
16:58
Hi @PaulReiners ;)
How are you finding the course?
room mode changed to Public: anyone may enter and talk
@PaulReiners sorry about that ... the room was frozen and I was messing about with the settings to see if it made a difference. Then forgot to open it up to the public again
Hi @user903526
hehe hi, guess I should change my username
It is a little anonymous ... at least you have a face and not a default gravatar
So how are you finding the class so far?
I like it. I actually took a couple courses using the Norvig book back in 2005, so good to hear things from the source
Although I am finding Professor Thrun more engaging
How about you?
17:15
Yeah, well I started reading the book and thought this is gonna be hard. Then after the first couple of lessons I thought ... this isn't so bad!
Yeah, the book is well written. It is a very accessible set of material
... but, like many others, find the questions a little loaded.
I think that topic has been done to death though
You mean the lecture questions
?
Yup, but by the twitter feed they are designed to trip us up.
I'm also taking the machine-learning course which I find a lot kinder in that regard.
It teaches you something, then asks you about what you've just learned
I'm taking that one as well.
17:18
How do you find them by comparison?
Merlin has made a change to the feeds posted into this room
Yeah, I feel the same way. At first I was frustrated, but I think that is my problem and once you let go of perfection, the trickery can help you. I think the questions should still be fair, though and a lot of Norvig's questions have been vague and just hard because of poor explaining
I agree that that homework should be taxing ... but the in-lecture questions should help you see if you've picked up on what's being said
Andrew Ng's class is amazing though ... so easy to understand, his course is so refined and well planned out. I accidently watched next weeks lectures already ;)
Yeah, I am impressed
Excited to learn more practical methods
I learned all the algorithms, but was at USC where we did not focus on the real world uses
Yup, AI seems a bit abstract yet, but I guess if we do the pacman practical it would make more sense
So did you already graduate?
17:23
Yeah, have you tried it yet?
Yeah, I'm taking the courses as a refresher and to push me to do more things related to AI again
I read about pacman, but I'm supposed to b finishing up a work project and I can't justify starting a pacman program
Refresher is a good idea - No harm in taking a dip in the brain pool ;)
hi @user995882
hello
posted on October 14, 2011 by darsie

http://www.ai-class.com/faq says: "Can online students interact with the professors? Yes, but not directly. Students can submit questions which will be ranked and the top questions will be addressed in online discussions led by Peter and Sebastian." Which are the forums where the professors answer questions and what are their user names? I was told they respond on twitter, but there is no r

posted on October 14, 2011 by Rumith

Why does the path cost explicitly depend on S' [the final state]? Knowing S [the initial state] and A [the action chosen] is enough to calculate the result, which provides us with S' [I'm assuming we're in a deterministic environment, but then in a stochastic environment the path cost would also depend on parameters other than these three], does it not? The definition can be found here (video

posted on October 14, 2011 by gbayliss

I had an AI room set up on StackOverflow.com a while back in preparation for this course and for general interest. I thought I would extend a warm invitation to all those here to use it as a clubhouse. If you don't have a stack overflow account then you probably need one. You can use the usual openID candidates for signing in. You will probably be familiar with the site layout as it's much t

posted on October 14, 2011 by Amber Jain

Hello, Is it possible to download the subtitles of videos? If yes, can anyone link me to the download page? Due to slow connection speed, I prefer to download videos and watch them off-line. But I can't seem to find an option to download subtitles on official course website or here on aiqus. Thanks a lot,

posted on October 14, 2011 by pingwang_cs

I explored the website, but can't find the place for turning in homework. Could anyone tell me how? Thank you a lot!

whoa what happened there ... feed-tastic
I updated the room to get the feed from aiqus.com
so any new questions should arrive here
@Merlin I'm gonna start a project at university of biomedic engineering, that uses AI in biomedic equipments
17:27
@user903526 yes you should change your name
how do I change it?
@rogcg are you taking the aiclass?
@user903526 just update your profile I think
@Merlin no, why?
you mean in the website?
You should be ... ai-class.com
also ml-class.com
I will. I think is very awesome!
17:29
Hi @Godeke .. glad to see an active q&a dude here
Ive watched some lectures from professor Andrew Ng
Hey there. I have enjoyed the AI forums and saw you set up a chat, thought I would drop by.
One of the advantages of working for yourself, from home, is that you can monitor forums. :)
@Godeke Completely Agree!
lol .. me too, but since the course started I've not got any real work done
I was surprised how many people didn't seem to have the AIMA book (or hadn't read it...)
17:31
I have 2 copies :) but only read the first chapter :(
Read! :-P
I'm really liking the ML 1.2x playback speed ;-)
Those fuzzy questions were so much easier having read the book.
+1 to that
1.2x playback speed makes his accent even harder for me :)
17:33
gotta run, thanks for setting up a room
I'm not really worried about the score I get ... I'm more interested in covering the material than the exams.
@Godeke where can I have this book?
I'm not either, in the long run... but I still hate fuzziness (unless it is a stuffed animal or something...)
@user903526 No worries, hope to see you again soon (with a new userid)
Hi @robrambusch
heads out for something to eat, but will pick up message later
before I go please check out the faq in the bottom right to see how to do stuff like pining users
18:04
The book is at amazon.com/Artificial-Intelligence-Modern-Approach-3rd/dp/… for purchase. There is a Kindle version, so you can read it on your computer.
If all you want are the algorithms documented (which a lot of the questions in the forum are asking for), you can just get them in a PDF: aima.cs.berkeley.edu/algorithms.pdf
19:03
posted on October 14, 2011 by darsie

"Tell me how many nodes are expanded [...] counting the start node and the goal node in your answer." Does that mean, we shall count the start/goal node even if it's not expanded?

19:55
@Merlin Updated my id, see ya around
posted on October 14, 2011 by shadow

Heuristic should be less than or less than equal to the actual cost to be admissible?

20:15
posted on October 14, 2011 by LeeHorowitz

I'm curious as to the thinking behind the policy of not showing the Homework assignments to the Basic Course students until after the Advanced students have been graded. I think there would be an advantage for us to be able to attempt the homework, those of us who have the time and energy at least, at the same time as the advanced students. We could then follow the discussions the advanced st

 
2 hours later…
22:16
posted on October 14, 2011 by bcode

Wikipedia says that A is an example of best first search. What are the other best first search algorithms other than A?

 
1 hour later…
23:16
posted on October 14, 2011 by susam

In the 'Optimistic Heuristics' function, we learn a rough sketch of a proof of why h(s) <= true_cost(s, goal) implies that A* finds the cheapest path in tree search. First let me present his argument point-wise. Let p be the solution path, so, p.end = goal. Let p' be a path in the frontier when A* completes. So, f(p) <= f(p'). So, g(p) + h(p) <= g(p') + h(p'). Since h(p) = 0, g(p) &l


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