Our research strategy has been to identify generic tasks--basic combinations of knowledge structures and inference strategies that are powerful for solving certain kinds of problems. Our strategy is best understood by considering the "interaction problem", that representing knowledge for the purpose
Automating knowledge acquisition for generic tasks
β Scribed by D.R. Pugh; C.J. Price
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 773 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0952-1976
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Research into knowledge acquisition is becoming increasingly important. One of the main aims of this research is to improve both the speed with which a knowledge-based system can be constructed, and the quality of the resulting knowledge base. Increasing the level of automation of the knowledge process has produced promising results, but has also raised new problems. This paper describes a new approach to the automation of knowledge acquisition which solves some of these problems.
The paper splits the knowledge acquisition process into several distinct stages and uses this split as a basis for classifying automated knowledgeacquisition tools. The problems with each type of tool are explored, before a new approach to the knowledge-acquisition automation problem is proposed, based on generic tasks.
The concept of the generic task has played an important role in furthering research into secondgeneration knowledge-based systems. To date, all the knowledge acquisition for generic tasks has been performed manually. If an automated knowledgeacquisition tool existed for each generic task, then this would facilitate the modular construction of knowledge-based systems. This is illustrated through an example knowledge-acquisition tool, which elicits knowledge for the Functional Reasoning generic task.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Knowledge acquisition has been identified as the bottleneck for knowledge engineering. One of the reasons is the lack of an integrated methodology that is able to provide tools and guidelines for the elicitation of knowledge as well as the verification and validation of the system developed. Even th
This paper describes a new knowledge acquisition method using a generic design environment where context-sensitive knowledge is used to build specific DSS for rural business. Although standard knowledge acquisition methods have been applied in rural business applications, uptake remains low and fami