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John McCarthy defined it as "the science and engineering of making intelligent machines"So the answer is : Both ( Science and Engineering )
Zude Zhou has written: 'Manufacturing intelligence for industrial engineering' -- subject(s): Industrial engineering, Technological innovations, Artificial intelligence 'Xu ni xian shi yu xu ni zhi zao =' -- subject(s): Virtual reality, Computer simulation 'Manufacturing intelligence for industrial engineering' -- subject(s): Industrial engineering, Technological innovations, Artificial intelligence
system real time business engineering and scientific embedded personal computer Artificial Intelligence network based
I would say for starters that computer science would do more good for you because artificial intelligence is mostly software producing along with intergrated hardware which will need to be programed.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence exhibited by machines, whereas natural intelligence (NI) refers to the intelligence held by humans and other living beings. Humans create AI by programming and engineering, but NI occurs naturally in biological species. NI is complex, flexible, and includes consciousness and subjective experiences, which are lacking in present AI.
Very smart, they can identify faces better then humans can. Read and understand many diffrent langauges... Hypothethically speaking, if an AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) were to be created, it would have an approximate IQ of 600.
AnswerComputer graphics and artificial intelligence are both fields of study at universities that take years to thoroughly understand. There are many different methods of implementing AI (artificial intelligence).
Depends on what you mean by living beings... Artificial intelligence as a definition applies strictly artificially produced forms of intelligence, i.e. computers, robots, etc. For instance, the person who first coined the term 'Artificial Intelligence", John McCarthy, defined it to mean "the science and engineering of making intelligent machines" (Wikipedia "Artificial Intelligence"). I suppose the philosophical question is: what are machines? Are they necessarily those hand-crafted pieces of metal and plastic? Or could a machine be more complex - a living creature that has never been able to process intelligent thoughts before (ex. an animal, to the best of our current knowledge) but is somehow given the capability through 'artificial intelligence engineering' to process thoughts? And how do we define intelligence? Is intelligence ultimately a natural ability to survive despite the odds? (Many animals are able to do this via body adaptations in extreme environments, without having an apparent "intelligence"). Food for thought!
Paul Kenneth Wright has written: 'Manufacturing intelligence' -- subject(s): Artificial intelligence, Industrial applications, Production engineering, Robotics '21st Century Manufacturing'
Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research was created in 1993.
A.I. Artificial Intelligence - album - was created in 2001.
A.I. Artificial Intelligence was created on 2001-06-29.