I am indebted to my thesis advisor, Michael Genesereth, for his guidance, inspiration, and support which has made this research possible. As a teacher and a sounding board for new ideas, Mike was extremely helpful in pointing out Haws, and suggesting new directions to explore. I would also like to thank Harold Brown for introducing me to the application of artificial intelligence to reasoning about designs, and his many valuable comments as a reader of this thesis. Significant contribu­ tions by the other members of my reading committee, Mark Horowitz, and Allen Peterson have greatly improved the content and organization of this thesis by forcing me to communicate my ideas more clearly. I am extremely grateful to the other members of the Logic Group at the Heuristic Programming Project for being a sounding board for my ideas, and providing useful comments. In particular, I would like to thank Matt Ginsberg, Vineet Singh, Devika Subramanian, Richard Trietel, Dave Smith, Jock Mackinlay, and Glenn Kramer for their pointed criticisms. This research was supported by Schlumberger Palo Alto Research (previously Fairchild Laboratory for Artificial Intelligence). I am grateful to Peter Hart, the former head of the AI lab, and his successor Marty Tenenbaum for providing an excellent environment for performing this research.
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I am indebted to my thesis advisor, Michael Genesereth, for his guidance, inspiration, and support which has made this research possible. This research was supported by Schlumberger Palo Alto Research (previously Fairchild Laboratory for Artificial Intelligence).
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1 Introduction.- 1.1 Motivation.- 1.2 Exploiting Design Morphology.- 1.3 Methodology.- 1.4 Example.- 1.5 Relationship to other work.- 1.6 Overview.- 2 Reformulation.- 2.1 Devices and Designs.- 2.2 Reformulating Designs.- 2.3 Design Correctness.- 2.4 Automatically Reformulating Designs.- 2.5 Manually Reformulating Designs.- 3 General Representation and Reasoning.- 3.1 Requirements for a Design Description Language.- 3.2 Syntax and Semantics for Predicate Calculus.- 3.3 Describing Designs.- 3.4 Automated Deduction.- 3.5 Utility of General Representation and Reasoning.- 3.5.1 Advantages.- 3.5.2 Disadvantages.- 4 Test Generation.- 4.1 Task Definition.- 4.2 Previous Work.- 4.3 The Saturn Test Generation System.- 5 Conclusion.- 5.1 Summary of Key Ideas.- 5.2 Further Work.- 5.3 Implementation State.- A Printer Adapter Card.- B Tests for the Printer Adapter Card.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780898381856
Publisert
1987-02-28
Utgiver
Vendor
Kluwer Academic Publishers
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
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