2,701 research outputs found
Violation of Bell's Inequalities with a Local Theory of Photons
We use a local theory of photons purely as particles to model the
single-photon experiment proposed by Tan, Walls, and Collett. Like Tan et al.
we are able to derive a violation of Bell's inequalities for photon counts
coincidence measurements. Our local probabilistic theory does not use any
specific quantum mechanical calculations.Comment: LaTeX, 11 pages, one figure (in LaTeX), submitted to Foundations of
Physics Letter
Comments on "There is no axiomatic system for the quantum theory"
In a recent paper, Nagata [1] claims to derive inconsistencies from quantum
mechanics. In this paper, we show that the inconsistencies do not come from
quantum mechanics, but from extra assumptions about the reality of observables
Instruction dialogues: Teaching new skills to a robot
Extended dialogues between a human user and a robot system are presented. The purpose of each dialogue is to teach the robot a new skill or to improve the performance of a skill it already has. The particular interest is in natural language dialogues but the illustrated techniques can be applied to any high level language. The primary purpose is to show how verbal instruction can be integrated with the robot's autonomous learning of a skill
Types of verbal interaction with instructable robots
An instructable robot is one that accepts instruction in some natural language such as English and uses that instruction to extend its basic repertoire of actions. Such robots are quite different in conception from autonomously intelligent robots, which provide the impetus for much of the research on inference and planning in artificial intelligence. Examined here are the significant problem areas in the design of robots that learn from vebal instruction. Examples are drawn primarily from our earlier work on instructable robots and recent work on the Robotic Aid for the physically disabled. Natural-language understanding by machines is discussed as well as in the possibilities and limits of verbal instruction. The core problem of verbal instruction, namely, how to achieve specific concrete action in the robot in response to commands that express general intentions, is considered, as are two major challenges to instructability: achieving appropriate real-time behavior in the robot, and extending the robot's language capabilities
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