Artificial Intelligence (AI), a term that in its broadest sense would
indicate the ability of an artifact to perform the same kinds of functions
that characterize human thought. With the growth of modern science, the
search for AI has taken two major directions: psychological and physiological
research into the nature of human thought, and the technological development
of increasingly sophisticated computing systems.
In the latter sense, the term AI has been applied to computer systems
and programs capable of performing tasks more complex than straightforward
programming, although still far from the realm of actual thought. The
most important fields of research in this area are information processing,
pattern recognition, game-playing computers, and applied fields such as
medical diagnosis. Current research in information processing deals with
programs that enable a computer to understand written or spoken information
and to produce summaries, answer specific questions, or redistribute information
to users interested in specific areas of this information. Essential to
such programs is the ability of the system to generate grammatically correct
sentences and to establish linkages between words, ideas, and associations
with other ideas.
In medicine, programs have been developed that analyze the disease symptoms,
medical history, and laboratory test results of a patient, and then suggest
a diagnosis to the physician. The diagnostic program is an example of
so-called expert systems-programs designed to perform tasks in specialized
areas as a human would. Expert systems take computers a step beyond straightforward
programming, being based on a technique called rule-based inference, in
which preestablished rule systems are used to process the data. Despite
their sophistication, systems still do not approach the complexity of
true intelligent thought.
The operation of the human mind is still little understood, and computer
design may remain essentially incapable of analogously duplicating those
unknown, complex processes. Various routes are being used in the effort
to reach the goal of true AI. One approach is to apply the concept of
parallel processing-interlinked and concurrent computer operations. Another
is to create networks of experimental computer chips, called silicon neurons,
which mimic data-processing functions of brain cells. Using analog technology,
the transistors in these chips emulate nerve-cell membranes in order to
operate at the speed of neurons.
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