UB - University at Buffalo, The State University of New York Computer Science and Engineering

CSE 463: Knowledge Representation

This page refers to the Spring 2008 offering of CSE 463 only. The information on this page does not necessarily apply to every offering of CSE 463.

Spring 2008

11517

Knowledge Representation

Introduces the field of knowledge representation and reasoning, the branch of artificial intelligence concerned with the techniques for representing and reasoning about the information to be used by an AI program. Topics typically include: the knowledge-representation hypothesis; propositional and first-order logic; model finding; resolution; syntactic proof theory; direct and refutation methods; relevance logic; truth maintenance and belief revision; commonsense reasoning; ontologies. Other topics that may be included as time permits are: modal logics; non-monotonic, defeasible, and default logics; logics of knowledge and belief; frames; description logics; vague and uncertain beliefs; logics of actions and time.

None presently available.

CSE 305 or permission of instructor

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