Description :
Intelligent assistant systems information is becoming the raw material of modern society. Access to information spaces and the capability to use them effectively and efficiently has become a key economical success factor. Intelligent Assistant Systems: Concepts, Techniques and Technologies contributes to the development of particular kinds of software and intelligent assistant systems, highlighting preliminary answers to the question, “what is assistance?”
Intelligent Assistant Systems: Concepts, Techniques and Technologies demonstrates that assistant systems will become reality, as the technology for implementing these systems is available and the problems that require assistance for their solutions are soon to be discovered. This book addresses intelligent assistant systems and issues, their scope, purpose, architecture, implementation, deployment, theoretical background, and use."
Content :
Table of Contents
Preface
.....................................................................................................
vi
Section
.
I:
.
Foundations
Chapter
.
I
Interaction
.
Scenarios
.
for
.
Information
.
Extraction
...............................
1
Gunter
Grieser,
Technical
University
Darmstadt,
Germany
Steffen
Lange,
University
of
Applied
Sciences
Darmstadt,
Germany
Chapter
.
II
Assistance
.
and
.
Induction:
.
The
.
Therapy
.
Planning
.
Case
....................
15
Klaus
Jantke,
Research
Institute
for
Information
Technologies,
Germany
Nataliya
Lamonova,
Hokkaido
University,
Japan
v
Chapter
.
III
Wrapper
.
Induction
.
Programs
.
as
.
Information
.
Extraction
.
Assistants
...............................................................................................
35
Klaus
Jantke,
Research
Institute
for
Information
Technologies,
Germany
Carsten
Müller,
SAP
AG,
Germany
Chapter
.
IV
Modeling Confidence for Assistant Systems
.......................................
64
Roland
H.
Kaschek,
Massey
University,
New
Zealand
Chapter
.
V
.
Intelligent
.
Support
.
for
.
Building
.
Knowledge
.
Bases
.
for
.
Natural
.
Language
.
Processing
..............................................................
86
Son
Bao
Pham,
University
of
New
South
Wales,
Australia
Achim
Hoffmann,
University
of
New
South
Wales,
Australia
Chapter
.
VI
Formalization
.
of
.
User
.
Preferences,
.
Obligations
.
and
.
Rights
...........
114
Klaus-Dieter
Schewe,
Massey
University,
New
Zealand
Bernhard
Thalheim,
Christian
Albrechts
University
Kiel,
Germany
Alexei
Tretiakov,
Massey
University,
New
Zealand
Section
.
II:
.
The
.
Memetics
.
Approach
.
to
.
Assistance
Chapter
.
VII
Building
.
Intelligent
.
Multimodal
.
Assistants
.
Based
.
on
.
Logic
.
Programming
.
in
.
the
.
Meme
.
Media
.
Architecture
..............................
145
Kimihito
Ito,
Hokkaido
University,
Japan
Chapter
.
VIII
From
.
Planning
.
Tools
.
to
.
Intelligent
.
Assistants:
.
Meme
.
Media
.
and
.
Logic
.
Programming
.
Technologies
.....................................................
169
Nataliya
Lamonova,
Hokkaido
University,
Japan
Kimihito
Ito,
Hokkaido
University,
Japan
Yuzuru
Tanaka,
Hokkaido
University,
Japan
v
Chapter
.
IX
Memetic
.
Approach
.
to
.
the
.
Location-Based
.
Ad
.
Hoc
.
Federation
.
of
.
Intelligent
.
Resources
......................................................................
182
Yuzuru
Tanaka,
Hokkaido
University,
Japan
v
Chapter
.
IX
Memetic
.
Approach
.
to
.
the
.
Location-Based
.
Ad
.
Hoc
.
Federation
.
of
.
Intelligent
.
Resources
......................................................................
182
Yuzuru
Tanaka,
Hokkaido
University,
Japan
Chapter
.
IX
Memetic
.
Approach
.
to
.
the
.
Location-Based
.
Ad
.
Hoc
.
Federation
.
of
.
Intelligent
.
Resources
......................................................................
182
Yuzuru
Tanaka,
Hokkaido
University,
Japan
Section
.
III:
.
Applications
Chapter
.
X
From
.
E-Learning
.
Tools
.
to
.
Assistants
.
by
.
Learner
.
Modelling
.
and
.
Adaptive
.
Behavior
.......................................................................
212
Klaus
Jantke,
Research
Institute
for
Information
Technologies,
Germany
Christoph
Igel,
Universität
des
Saarlandes,
Germany
Roberta
Sturm,
Universität
des
Saarlandes,
Germany
Chapter
.
XI
Mathematics
.
in
.
Virtual
.
Knowledge
.
Spaces:
.
User
.
Adaptation
.
by
.
Intelligent
.
Assistants
......................................................................
232
Sabina
Jeschke,
Berlin
University
of
Technology,
Germany
Thomas
Richter,
Berlin
University
of
Technology,
Germany
Chapter
.
XII
Building
.
a
.
Virtual
.
Trainer
.
for
.
an
.
Immersive
.
Haptic
.
Virtual
.
Reality
.
Environment
...........................................................................
264
Alexander
Krumpholz,
CSIRO
ICT
Centre,
Australia
Glossary
...............................................................................................
280
.
About
.
the
.
Authors
...............................................................................
315
Index
.....................................................................................................
321
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