On 1/24/07, Bob Mottram <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I think it would be better to design a system with probabilistic reasoning
as a fundamental component from the outset, rather than trying to bolt this
on as an after thought.  I know from doing a lot of stuff with machine
vision that modelling sensor uncertainties is critical for being able to
understand the spatial structure of the environment, and I expect similar
principles will apply when reasoning within more abstract domains.

Yes I agree.  I think Pei Wang's version of uncertain logic is very simple
and effective.  It uses 2 numbers, one for probability (as frequency) and
one for "support" or "confidence".

On the other hand, I suspect that many commonsense statements do not have
probabilistic values attached to them.  For example "water conducts
electricity" or "oil is slippery" are not really probabilistic.  We should
leave an option for a statement to be non-probabilistic.

YKY

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