Overview
- Editors:
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Tarek R. Besold
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Institute of Cognitive Science, University of Osnabrück, Osnabrück, Germany
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Marco Schorlemmer
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IIIA-CSIC, Bellaterra (Barcelona), Spain
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Alan Smaill
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CISA, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
- Gives an overview of state-of-the-art research at the intersection of Computational Creativity, Concept Invention, and General Intelligence
- Contains previously unpublished contributions by leading researchers in the respective fields
- Offers a genuinely new interdisciplinary perspective on highly relevant topics within Artificial Intelligence
- Addresses important challenges and crucial questions that will determine the future of the field
- Covers topics which are highly relevant for both, researchers at universities as well as applied scientists and developers in industry
- Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
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Table of contents (19 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xxii
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Theory
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- Simon Colton, Alison Pease, Joseph Corneli, Michael Cook, Rose Hepworth, Dan Ventura
Pages 3-36
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- Mohammad Majid al-Rifaie, Mark Bishop
Pages 37-49
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- John Licato, Selmer Bringsjord, Naveen Sundar Govindarajulu
Pages 93-107
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- Geraint A. Wiggins, Jamie Forth
Pages 127-148
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Practice
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Front Matter
Pages 149-149
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- Oliver Kutz, John Bateman, Fabian Neuhaus, Till Mossakowski, Mehul Bhatt
Pages 167-196
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- Hugo Gonçalo Oliveira, Amílcar Cardoso
Pages 243-266
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- Simon Ellis, Alex Haig, Naveen Sundar G, Selmer Bringsjord, Joe Valerio, Jonas Braasch et al.
Pages 285-308
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- Florian Pinel, Lav R. Varshney, Debarun Bhattacharjya
Pages 327-346
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- Ashok K. Goel, Spencer Rugaber
Pages 347-370
About this book
Computational Creativity, Concept Invention, and General Intelligence in their own right all are flourishing research disciplines producing surprising and captivating results that continuously influence and change our view on where the limits of intelligent machines lie, each day pushing the boundaries a bit further. By 2014, all three fields also have left their marks on everyday life – machine-composed music has been performed in concert halls, automated theorem provers are accepted tools in enterprises’ R&D departments, and cognitive architectures are being integrated in pilot assistance systems for next generation airplanes. Still, although the corresponding aims and goals are clearly similar (as are the common methods and approaches), the developments in each of these areas have happened mostly individually within the respective community and without closer relationships to the goings-on in the other two disciplines. In order to overcome this gap and to provide a common platform for interaction and exchange between the different directions, the International Workshops on “Computational Creativity, Concept Invention, and General Intelligence” (C3GI) have been started. At ECAI-2012 and IJCAI-2013, the first and second edition of C3GI each gathered researchers from all three fields, presenting recent developments and results from their research and in dialogue and joint debates bridging the disciplinary boundaries. The chapters contained in this book are based on expanded versions of accepted contributions to the workshops and additional selected contributions by renowned researchers in the relevant fields. Individually, they give an account of the state-of-the-art in their respective area, discussing both, theoretical approaches as well as implemented systems. When taken together and looked at from an integrative perspective, the book in its totality offers a starting point for a (re)integration of Computational Creativity, Concept Invention,and General Intelligence, making visible common lines of work and theoretical underpinnings, and pointing at chances and opportunities arising from the interplay of the three fields.
Editors and Affiliations
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Institute of Cognitive Science, University of Osnabrück, Osnabrück, Germany
Tarek R. Besold
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IIIA-CSIC, Bellaterra (Barcelona), Spain
Marco Schorlemmer
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CISA, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Alan Smaill