11 research outputs found
First CLIPS Conference Proceedings, volume 2
The topics of volume 2 of First CLIPS Conference are associated with following applications: quality control; intelligent data bases and networks; Space Station Freedom; Space Shuttle and satellite; user interface; artificial neural systems and fuzzy logic; parallel and distributed processing; enchancements to CLIPS; aerospace; simulation and defense; advisory systems and tutors; and intelligent control
Second CLIPS Conference Proceedings, volume 2
Papers presented at the 2nd C Language Integrated Production System (CLIPS) Conference held at the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center (JSC) on 23-25 September 1991 are documented in these proceedings. CLIPS is an expert system tool developed by the Software Technology Branch at NASA JSC and is used at over 4000 sites by government, industry, and business. During the three days of the conference, over 40 papers were presented by experts from NASA, Department of Defense, other government agencies, universities, and industry
Studies related to the process of program development
The submitted work consists of a collection of publications arising from research carried out at Rhodes University (1970-1980) and at Heriot-Watt University (1980-1992). The theme of this research is the process of program development, i.e. the process of creating a computer program to solve some particular problem. The papers presented cover a number of different topics which relate to this process, viz. (a) Programming methodology programming. (b) Properties of programming languages. aspects of structured. (c) Formal specification of programming languages. (d) Compiler techniques. (e) Declarative programming languages. (f) Program development aids. (g) Automatic program generation. (h) Databases. (i) Algorithms and applications
Proceedings of the 11th Workshop on Nonmonotonic Reasoning
These are the proceedings of the 11th Nonmonotonic Reasoning Workshop. The aim of this series is to bring together active researchers in the broad area of nonmonotonic reasoning, including belief revision, reasoning about actions, planning, logic programming, argumentation, causality, probabilistic and possibilistic approaches to KR, and other related topics. As part of the program of the 11th workshop, we have assessed the status of the field and discussed issues such as: Significant recent achievements in the theory and automation of NMR; Critical short and long term goals for NMR; Emerging new research directions in NMR; Practical applications of NMR; Significance of NMR to knowledge representation and AI in general
A Logical Semantics For Hypothetical Rulebases With Deletion
This paper addresses a limitation of most deductive database systems: the
First CLIPS Conference Proceedings, volume 1
The first Conference of C Language Production Systems (CLIPS) hosted by the NASA-Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in August 1990 is presented. Articles included engineering applications, intelligent tutors and training, intelligent software engineering, automated knowledge acquisition, network applications, verification and validation, enhancements to CLIPS, space shuttle quality control/diagnosis applications, space shuttle and real-time applications, and medical, biological, and agricultural applications
A framework for managing global risk factors affecting construction cost performance
Poor cost performance of construction projects has been a major concern for both
contractors and clients. The effective management of risk is thus critical to the success of any construction project and the importance of risk management has grown as projects have become more complex and competition has increased. Contractors have
traditionally used financial mark-ups to cover the risk associated with construction
projects but as competition increases and margins have become tighter they can no longer rely on this strategy and must improve their ability to manage risk. Furthermore, the construction industry has witnessed significant changes particularly in procurement
methods with clients allocating greater risks to contractors.
Evidence shows that there is a gap between existing risk management techniques and
tools, mainly built on normative statistical decision theory, and their practical application
by construction contractors. The main reason behind the lack of use is that risk decision
making within construction organisations is heavily based upon experience, intuition and
judgement and not on mathematical models.
This thesis presents a model for managing global risk factors affecting construction cost
performance of construction projects. The model has been developed using behavioural
decision approach, fuzzy logic technology, and Artificial Intelligence technology. The
methodology adopted to conduct the research involved a thorough literature survey on
risk management, informal and formal discussions with construction practitioners to
assess the extent of the problem, a questionnaire survey to evaluate the importance of
global risk factors and, finally, repertory grid interviews aimed at eliciting relevant
knowledge. There are several approaches to categorising risks permeating construction projects. This
research groups risks into three main categories, namely organisation-specific, global and
Acts of God. It focuses on global risk factors because they are ill-defined, less
understood by contractors and difficult to model, assess and manage although they have
huge impact on cost performance. Generally, contractors, especially in developing
countries, have insufficient experience and knowledge to manage them effectively. The
research identified the following groups of global risk factors as having significant impact
on cost performance: estimator related, project related, fraudulent practices related,
competition related, construction related, economy related and political related factors.
The model was tested for validity through a panel of validators (experts) and crosssectional
cases studies, and the general conclusion was that it could provide valuable
assistance in the management of global risk factors since it is effective, efficient, flexible
and user-friendly. The findings stress the need to depart from traditional approaches and
to explore new directions in order to equip contractors with effective risk management
tools
The 1991 Goddard Conference on Space Applications of Artificial Intelligence
The purpose of this annual conference is to provide a forum in which current research and development directed at space applications of artificial intelligence can be presented and discussed. The papers in this proceeding fall into the following areas: Planning and scheduling, fault monitoring/diagnosis/recovery, machine vision, robotics, system development, information management, knowledge acquisition and representation, distributed systems, tools, neural networks, and miscellaneous applications