Instructor
Raymond J. Mooney
Office Hours: Mon. & Wed., 2-3PM,
CSA 1.102
Teaching Assistant
Craig Corcoran
Office hours: 1-2PM Tu. & Thurs.
PAI 5.38-Desk 6 (Directly across the hall from 5.40)
Time and Place
Fall 2010, Mon & Wed, 11:00AM-12:30PM, WEL 2.312
General Course Information
Textbook
Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach by
Stuart Russell and
Peter Norvig
Lecture Slides
Written Homeworks
Solutions in /u/mooney/cs343-code/solns/
Programming Projects
Solutions in /u/mooney/cs343-code/solns/
Java Course Code
Exams
- Midterm (Oct. 13, in class)
- Final (Dec. 8, 9AM-12PM)
Homeworks and Tests From Previous Year
Solutions in /u/mooney/cs343-code/old-solns/
Miscellaneous Links
Popular Books Related to AI
- Gödel,
Escher, Bach : An Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas R. Hofstadter
A
classic, poetic, philosophical defense of AI.
-
Machines Who Think by Pamela McCorduck.
A good review of early AI history.
-
Robot: Mere Machine to Transcendent Mind by Hans P. Moravec
Somewhat hyped book by a CMU robotics researcher.
-
Flesh and Machines: How Robots Will Change Us
by Rodney Allen Brooks
Reasonably decent book by MIT's leading robotics researcher.
-
Wired for War
by Peter Warren Singer
Reviews growing use of robots and unmanned vehicles in warfare.
- Behind Deep Blue:
Building the Computer That Defeated the World Chess Champion by
Feng-Hsiung Hsu
Autobiographical book on the development of a history
making game-playing system. Interesting personal story of the hard engineering
work that went into the system, with a few interesting facts on the technical
aspects.
- The Age of
Spiritual Machines : When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence by Ray
Kurzweil
A recent view by an AI entrepreneur that has content if you ignore
all the hype and overly-optimistic trust that Moore's law will magically solve all
of the major problems.
- Hal's Legacy
: 2001's Computer As Dream and Reality
An interesting collection of
edited articles written to celebrate the fictional birthday of a famous
intelligent computer who's true birthday must unfortunately be delayed, pending
AI's inevitable progress.
- The Sciences
of the Artificial by Herbert Simon
AI as science by one of its founders.
- Models of My
Life by Herbert Simon.
An autobiography of one of AI's founders
who's intellectual contributions also include fundamental contributions
to economics (for which he won the Nobel prize), cognitive psychology,
and computer science (such as co-inventing the linked list in the 1950's).
- Alan Turing:
The Enigma by Alan Hodges.
A biography of one of the founders of CS
and originator of the Turing test. Also a testimony to the tragic implications
of homophobia.
- The Emperor's
New Mind : Concerning Computers, Minds, and the Laws of Physics and Shadows of the Mind
: A Search for the Missing Science of Consciousness and The Large, the Small
and the Human Mind by Roger Penrose
A completely bogus argument against
AI by a hopelessly Platonic mathematician. The last book contains an appended
article by Stephen Hawking (a colleague of Penrose's) who of course doesn't buy
his bogus argument.
-
The Mind's New Science : A History of the Cognitive Revolution by Howard Gardner
A nice history of the development of cognitive science.
-
How the Mind Works ,
The Language Instinct , and
Words and Rules : The Ingredients of Language
by Steven Pinker
Fun reading on lots of interesting issues in modern Cognitive Science and Linguistics if you
don't take his exaggerated beliefs in nativism and evolutionary psychology too
seriously.
-
Bots : The Origin of New Species
by Andrew Leonard
A light, somewhat hyped book on on Internet agents, chatterbots, etc.
with a few funny stories.
- Mathematics:
The Loss of Certainty by Morris Kline
A very nice book on the failed
enterprise of using logic to build a firm foundation for infallible mathematics
and the role of Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem in the philosophy of
mathematics.
-
Incompleteness: The Proof and Paradox of Kurt Gödel by Rebecca
Goldstein
An interesting biography of Kurt Gödel. Too bad he was
such a Platonist that, unlike Turing, he did not understand the true
implications of his own theorems (interesting author connection: Goldstein is
Pinker's wife).
mooney@cs.utexas.edu