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The questions studied in Artificial Intelligence Group (AI) are of enormous practical and scientific importance and have proven to be quite difficult for conventional programming techniques. Human brains evolved to excel at tasks such as vision, motor control, speech, and language understanding, and are much better at these thanartificial systems. The AI Group effort is exploring how computational models and techniques based on natural intelligence can prove useful in applications tasks. The ICSI project differs from most others in its emphasis on structured networks, strong methods that exploit scientific knowledge, and extensive interaction with other computer science techniques and theory.
In particular, the AI Group
continues its long-term study of language, learning, and connectionist
neural modeling. The scientific goal of this effort is to understand how
people learn and use language. The applied goal is to develop systems
that support human centered computing through natural language and other
intelligent systems.
Natural language processing is a core activity of the AI
Group. Three main efforts comprise this work: FrameNet, a
project to build a machine-readable lexicon with detailed semantic
descriptions of a substantial portion of the English vocabulary; the Neural Theory of Language (NTL), which uses computational models and
simulations of language and learning to answer basic questions about the
production and use of natural language; and SHRUTI, a project on
representation and inference that deals with rapid parallel inferencing
of the kind humans display when performing common-sense reasoning or
recalling association.
Professor Srini Narayanan, Adjunct Professor of
Cognitive Science at UC Berkeley, is the AI Group leader. He is a recipient of a Google Faculty Research Award and a 2008-2009 fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Study in Berlin.
Browse AI Group Publications
Read about specific projects of the AI Group.
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