Elsevier

Artificial Intelligence

Volume 23, Issue 3, August 1984, Pages 269-294
Artificial Intelligence

Why am and eurisko appear to work

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Abstract

The am program was constructed by Lenat in 1975 as an early experiment in getting machines to learn by discovery. In the preceding article in this issue of the AI Journal, Ritchie and Hanna focus on that work as they raise several fundamental questions about the methodology of artificial intelligence research. Part of this paper is a response to the specific points they make. It is seen that the difficulties they cite fall into four categories, the most serious of which are omitted heuristics, and the most common of which are miscommunications. Their considerations, and our post-am work on machines that learn, have clarified why am succeeded in the first place, and why it was so difficult to use the same paradigm to discover new heuristics. Those recent insights spawn questions about “where the meaning really resides” in the concepts discovered by am. This in turn leads to an appreciation of the crucial and unique role of representation in theory formation, specifically the benefits of having syntax mirror semantics. Some criticism of the paradigm of this work arises due to the ad hoc nature of many pieces of the work; at the end of this article we examine how this very adhocracy may be a potential source of power in itself.

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An earlier, shorter version of this paper appeared in Proc. AAAI, 1983.

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