Robotics Reference
In-Depth Information
Chapter 2: Early History—Robots, Thought, Creativity,
Learning and Translation
[1] “An Electro-Mechanical
'Animal”'. W. Grey Walter, Discovery ,
vol. 11, 1950, pp. 90-95.
[2] “Computing Machinery and Intelligence”. Alan Turing, Mind,
vol. LIX, no. 236, October 1950, pp. 433-460.
[3] “AI's Greatest Trends and Controversies”. (Eds.) Marti Hearst and
Haym Hirsh. IEEE Intelligent Systems , January 2000, pp. 8-17.
Also available at http://www.computer.org/intelligent/articles/AI
controversies.htm.
[4] Discourse on the Right Method for Conducting One's Reason and Dis-
covering the Truth in the Sciences .Rene Descartes, 1637, translated
in The Philosophical Writings of Descartes, Cottingham, Stoothoff
and Murdoch, vol.1, part 5, 1985, pp. 131-141, Cambridge Uni-
versity Press, Cambridge.
[5] “Do Machines Think About Machines Thinking?” Leonard Pinsky,
Mind , vol. 60, 1951, pp. 397-398.
[6] “Translation”. Warren Weaver, in Machine Translation of Languages .
(Eds.) William Locke and Donald Booth, Chapman and Hall, Lon-
don, 1955, pp. 15-21.
[7] “The Present Status of Automatic Translation of Languages”.
Yehoshua Bar-Hillel, American Documentation , vol. 2, 1951,
pp. 229-237.
[8] “Russian Is Turned into English by a Fast Electronic Translator”.
Robert K. Plumb, New York Times , 8 January 1954.
[9] “A Proposal for the Dartmouth Summer Research Project on Ar-
tificial Intelligence”. John McCarthy, Marvin Minsky, Nathan
Rochester and Claude Shannon. Available at http://www-formal
.stanford.edu/jmc/history/dartmouth/dartmouth.html .
Chapter 3: How Computers Play Games
[1] One Jump Ahead . Jonathan Schaeffer, Springer-Verlag, New York,
1997.
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