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Journal ArticleDOI

Expert Systems and Diagnostic Expertise in the Mechanical and Electrical Domains

Pamela K. Fink, +1 more
- Vol. 17, Iss: 3, pp 340-349
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TLDR
An expert system design is presented, called the integrated diagnostic model (IDM), that attempts to address some of the issues involved in bridging the gap between human and computer expertise.
Abstract
Current expert system technology tends to rely on the use of shallow empirically based experiential knowledge. With only this type of knowledge available, expert systems have been capable of reaching a high level of agreement with human experts in a limited area of expertise. However, due to the nature of their knowledge, such systems fall short of human expertise in many ways. The human diagnostic process is examined as it relates to the malfunction of mechanical and electrical devices. An expert system design is presented, called the integrated diagnostic model (IDM), that attempts to address some of the issues involved in bridging the gap between human and computer expertise. The IDM contains two different types of knowledge, one based on experience and one based on how the device to be diagnosed functions. These two types of knowledge are used together during a diagnostic session to determine what is wrong with the device. To demonstrate how the IDM works, an interaction with a prototype system that was built using the IDM is described; then research on extensions to the IDM is discussed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fault diagnosis of machines via parameter estimation and knowledge processing: tutorial paper

TL;DR: A general methodology for machines and other processes is described by using few measurements, dynamic process and signal models and parameter estimation to generate analytical symptoms to detect faults earlier and to localize them better.
Patent

Integrated disease information system

TL;DR: In this paper, a system including a set of software-based Explorers, and a computer assisted methodology support the development of new medical interventions for diseases, including discovering proposed interventions, designing clinical trials, performing pharmacoeconomic analysis, and illustrating disease progression for various patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strategies for Diagnosis

Robert Milne
TL;DR: A survey of the architectures for the complex strategies now available for diagnosis is presented, showing that many new strategies have emerged to support much more complex reasoning for diagnosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Device representation-the significance of functional knowledge

TL;DR: Progress toward a device representation that organizes knowledge based on functionality is described, and the functional representation described provides a package that shows the relationship among structure, function, and behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional and teleological knowledge in the multimodeling approach for reasoning about physical systems: a case study in diagnosis

TL;DR: A novel approach is proposed for defining, representing, and using functional knowledge which play a fundamental role both from the representation and reasoning perspectives in the representation of physical systems.
References
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Commonsense reasoning about causality: deriving behavior from structure

TL;DR: This paper presents a qualitative-reasoning method for predicting the behavior of mechanisms characterized by continuous, time-varying parameters that can detect a previously unsuspected landmark point at which the system is in stable equilibrium.
Book ChapterDOI

Causal understanding of patient illness in medical diagnosis

TL;DR: A mechanism for describing a patient with the ability to handle complex clinical situations arising in illnesses with multiple etiologies, to evaluate the physiological validity of diagnostic possibilities being explored, and to organize large amounts of seemingly unrelated facts into coherent causal descriptions is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expert Systems: Where Are We? And Where Do We Go from Here?

Randall Davis
- 15 Jun 1982 - 
TL;DR: The work on expert systems has received extensive attention recently, prompting growing interest in a range of environments as discussed by the authors, and this is a good time then to review what we know, asses the current prospects, and suggest directions appropriate for the next steps of basic research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expert Computer Systems

TL;DR: Since these systems use a combination of artificial intelligence (AI) problem-solving and knowledgerepresentation techniques, information on these areas is also included.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deep versus compiled knowledge approaches to diagnostic problem-solving

TL;DR: This paper argues that given a body of underlying knowledge that is relevant to diagnostic reasoning in a medical domain, it is possible to create a diagnostic problem-solving structure which has all the aspects of the underlying knowledge needed for diagnostic reasoning “compiled” into it.