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Showing papers by "Hiroki R. Ueda published in 1998"


Journal Article
TL;DR: Given how much biological metaphors have inspired AI and computer science, biology can help reinvigorate many other AI subfields and promise to enable many things that have long been pipe dreams of autonomous robotics, artificial life, and cognitive science.

1 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In some areas, the computer has bested its biological counterparts in efficiency and simplicity. But for many domains the biological "real thing" remains superior to the artificial algorithms that it inspired.
Abstract: Computer science owes a huge debt to biological systems. The field came about largely as an attempt to understand and replicate the function and abilities of the brain. From this early lineage have sprung many subfields derived largely from biological metaphors: computer vision, neural networks, evolutionary computation, robotics, multiagent studies, and much of artificial intelligence. In some areas, the computer has bested its biological counterparts in efficiency and simplicity. But for many domains the biological "real thing" remains superior to the artificial algorithms that it inspired. While computer science has been simplifying its inspirations from biology, biologists have been catching up. Soon it will be possible to model entire neurosystems, gene-regulation mechanisms, evolutionary processes and even whole organisms on a computer. Given how much biological metaphors have inspired AI and computer science, biology can help reinvigorate many other AI subfields. Moreover, modeling and analysis promise to enable many things that have long been pipe dreams of autonomous robotics, artificial life, and cognitive science.

1 citations