- From: Paola Di Maio <paoladimaio10@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 10 Nov 2022 20:58:57 +0800
- To: Adeel <aahmad1811@gmail.com>
- Cc: W3C AIKR CG <public-aikr@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAMXe=SrbJhbPGpg5Xzg6o_U-nvyYJWQ95FnGYce1g9oadnxSxw@mail.gmail.com>
Hello Adeel I shared the two projects to show some working examples of AI tools that use symbolic explicit and shared KR so that interested people can play with/tweak, and comment on You can test the tools using any prompt you like, worded and reworded in any way you like to try to understand the reasoning behind them and then compare the outcome of the reasoning with human expertise I am finding it interesting and state of the art NLP, working apps that can be used not only to find out answers, but also to understand how AI can work without being scary/dangerous Enjoy On Thu, Nov 10, 2022 at 8:39 PM Adeel <aahmad1811@gmail.com> wrote: > Hello, > > In both projects that you have shared and pointed out, it seems like you > are proving that KR is a subset of AI. > If you were to build an AI system, based on KR, it would likely also > deduce on basis of inference that being an AI system using KR that KR must > be a subset of AI. > > Thanks, > > Adeel > > On Thu, 10 Nov 2022 at 05:52, Paola Di Maio <paola.dimaio@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Here is another one to play with >> https://consensus.app >> >> like all search-based engines, AI powered or not, its output reflects the >> perspective contained in the knowledge base it uses >> >> this is why it is important to be able to input some subjective >> configuration parameters/filters, to bring up at least some personalized >> result >> >
Received on Thursday, 10 November 2022 13:01:21 UTC