VI SEM CSE CS1351 Artificial Intelligence UNIT-III Question and Answers
VI SEM CSE CS1351 Artificial Intelligence UNIT-III Question and Answers
VI SEM CSE CS1351 Artificial Intelligence UNIT-III Question and Answers
VI SEM CSE
CS1351
Artificial Intelligence
(3) What are the elements of propositional logic? Simple sentences which are true or false are basic propositions. Larger and more complex sentences are constructed from basic propositions by combining them with connectives. Thus propositions and connectives are the basic elements of propositional logic. Though there are many connectives, we are going to use the following five basic connectives here: NOT, AND, OR, IF_THEN (or IMPLY), IF_AND_ONLY_IF. They are also denoted by the symbols: , , , , , respectively.
(6) What is entailment? Propositions tell about the notion of truth and it can be applied to logical reasoning. We can have logical entailment between sentences. This is known as entailment where a sentence follows logically from another sentence. In mathematical notation we write :
Figure 7.1 shows the outline of a knowledge-based agent program. Like all our agents, it takes a percept as input and returns an action. The agent maintains a knowledge base, KB, which may initially contain some background knowledge. Each time the agent program is called, it does three things. First, it TELLS the knowledge base what it perceives. Second, it ASKS the knowledge base what action it should perform. In the process of answering this query, extensive reasoning may be done about the current state of the world, about the outcomes of possible action sequences, and so on.
(8) Explain in detail the connectives used in propositional logic. The syntax of propositional logic defines the allowable sentences. The atomic sentencesthe indivisible syntactic elements-consist of a single proposition symbol. Each such symbol
stands for a proposition that can be true or false. We will use uppercase names for symbols: P, Q, R, and so on. Complex sentences are constructed from simpler sentences using logical connectives. There are five connectives in common use:
(9) Define First order Logic? Whereas propositional logic assumes the world contains facts, first-order logic (like natural language) assumes the world contains Objects: people, houses, numbers, colors, baseball games, wars, Relations: red, round, prime, brother of, bigger than, part of, comes between, Functions: father of, best friend, one more than, plus, (10) Specify the syntax of First-order logic in BNF form.
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The basic syntactic elements of first-order logic are the symbols that stand for objects, relations, and functions. The symbols,come in three kinds: a) constant symbols, which stand for objects; b) predicate symbols, which stand for relations; c) and function symbols, which stand for functions. We adopt the convention that these symbols will begin with uppercase letters. Example: Constant symbols : Richard and John; predicate symbols : Brother, OnHead, Person, King, and Crown; function symbol : LeftLeg. (13) What are quantifiers? There is need to express properties of entire collections of objects,instead of enumerating the objects by name. Quantifiers let us do this. FOL contains two standard quantifiers called a) Universal () and b) Existential ( ) Universal quantification (x) P(x) : means that P holds for all values of x in the domain associated with that variable E.g., (x) dolphin(x) => mammal(x) Existential quantification ( x)P(x) means that P holds for some value of x in the domain associated with that variable E.g., ( x) mammal(x) ^ lays-eggs(x) Permits one to make a statement about some object without naming it (14) Explain Universal Quantifiers with an example. Rules such as "All kings are persons,'' is written in first-order logic as x King(x) => Person(x) where is pronounced as For all .. Thus, the sentence says, "For all x, if x is a king, then z is a person." The symbol x is called a variable(lower case letters) The sentence x P,where P is a logical expression says that P is true for every object x. (15) Explain Existential quantifiers with an example. Universal quantification makes statements about every object.
It is possible to make a statement about some object in the universe without naming it,by using an existential quantifier. Example King John has a crown on his head x Crown(x) ^ OnHead(x,John) x is pronounced There exists an x such that .. or For some x .. (16) What are nested quantifiers?
Example-2 Everybody loves somebody means that for every person,there is someone that person loves x y Loves(x,y) (17) Explain the connection between and Everyone likes icecream is equivalent there is no one who does not like ice cream This can be expressed as : x Likes(x,IceCream) is equivalent to Likes(x,IceCream) (18) What are the steps associated with the knowledge Engineering process? Discuss them by applying the steps to any real world application of your choice. Knowledge Engineering
The general process of knowledge base constructiona process is called knowledge engineering. A knowledge engineer is someone who investigates a particular domain, learns what concepts are important in that domain, and creates a formal representation of the objects and relations in the domain. We will illustrate the knowledge engineering process in an electronic circuit domain that should already be fairly familiar,
2. Assemble the relevant knowledge. The knowledge engineer might already be an expert in the domain, or need to work with real experts to extract what they know-a might process called knowledge acquisition. 3. Decide on a vocabulary of predicates, functions, and constants. That is, translate the important domain-level concepts into logic-level names. Once the choices have been made. the result is a vocabulary that is known as the ontology of the domain. The word ontology means a particular theory of the nature of being or existence. 4. Encode general /cnowledge about the domain. The knowledge engineer writes down the axioms for all the vocabulary terms. This pins down (to the extent possible) the meaning of the terms, enabling the expert to check the content. Often, this step reveals misconceptions or gaps in the vocabulary that must be fixed by returning to step 3 and iterating through the process. 5. Encode a description of the specijic problem insttznce. For a logical agent, problem instances are supplied by the sensors, whereas a "disembodied" knowledge base is supplied with additional sentences in the same way that traditional programs are supplied with input data. 6. Pose queries to the inference procedure and get answers. This is where the reward is: we can let the inference procedure operate on the axioms and problem-specific facts to derive the facts we are interested in knowing. 7. Debug the knowledge base. x NumOfLegs(x,4) => Mammal(x) Is false for reptiles ,amphibians. To understand this seven-step process better, we now apply it to an extended example-the domain of electronic circuits.
There are many reasoning tasks associated with digital circuits. At the highest level, one analyzes the circuit's functionality. For example, what are all the gates connected to the first input terminal? Does the circuit contain feedback loops? These will be our tasks in this section. Assemble the relevant knowledge What do we know about digital circuits? For our purposes, they are composed of wires and gates. Signals flow along wires to the input terminalls of gates, and each gate produces a signal on the output terminal that flows along another wire. Decide on a vocabulary We now know that we want to talk about circuits, terminals, signals, and gates. The next step is to choose functions, predicates, and constants to represent them. We will start from individual gates and move up to circuits. First, we need to be able to distinguish a gate from other gates. This is handled by naming gates with constants: X I , X2, and so on Encode general knowledge of the domain One sign that we have a good ontology is that there are very few general rules which need to be specified. A sign that we have a good vocabulary is that each rule can be stated clearly and concisely. With our example, we need only seven simple rules to describe everything we need to know about circuits: 1. If two terminals are connected, then they have the same signal: 2. The signal at every terminal is either 1 or 0 (but not both): 3. Connected is a commutative predicate: 4. An OR gate's output is 1 if and only if any of its inputs is 1: 5. An A.ND gate's output is 0 if and only if any of its inputs is 0: 6. An XOR gate's output is 1 if and only if its inputs are different: 7. A NOT gate's output is different from its input: Encode the specific problem instance The circuit shown in Figure 8.4 is encoded as circuit C1 with the following description. First, we categorize the gates: Type(X1)= XOR Type(X2)= XOR Pose queries to the inference procedure What combinations of inputs would cause the first output of Cl (the sum bit) to be 0 and the second output of C1 (the carry bit) to be l? Debug the knowledge base We can perturb the knowledge base in various ways to see what kinds of erroneous behaviors emerge.
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The best way to find usage of First order logic is through examples. The examples can be taken from some simple domains. In knowledge representation, a domain is just some part of the world about which we wish to express some knowledge.
ASK(KB, x person(x))
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for any variable v and ground term g E.g., x King(x) Greedy(x) Evil(x) yields:
King(John) Greedy(John) Evil(John) King(Richard) Greedy(Richard) Evil(Richard) King(Father(John)) Greedy(Father(John)) Evil(Father(John)) . . .
E.g., x Crown(x) OnHead(x,John) yields: Crown(C1) OnHead(C1,John) provided C1 is a new constant symbol, called a Skolem constant c
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Using a deduction to reach a conclusion from a set of antecedents is called forward chaining. In other words,the system starts from a set of facts,and a set of rules,and tries to find the way of using these rules and facts to deduce a conclusion or come up with a suitable couse of action. This is known as data driven reasoning. EXAMPLE
The proof tree generated by forward chaining. Example knowledge base The law says that it is a crime for an American to sell weapons to hostile nations. The country Nono, an enemy of America, has some missiles, and all of its missiles were sold to it by Colonel West, who is American. Prove that Col. West is a criminal
American(x) Weapon(y) Sells(x,y,z) Hostile(z) Criminal(x) Owns(Nono,M 1) and Missile(M1)
... it is a crime for an American to sell weapons to hostile nat ions: Nono has some missiles, i.e., x Owns(Nono,x) Missile(x): all of its missiles were sold to it by Colonel West Missiles are weapons:
Missile(x) Owns(Nono,x) Sells(West,x,Nono) Missile(x) Weapon(x)
Note: (a) The initial facts appear in the bottom level (b) Facts inferred on the first iteration is in the middle level (c) The facts inferered on the 2nd iteration is at the top level Forward chaining algorithm
(22) What is backward chaining ? Explain with an example. Forward chaining applies a set of rules and facts to deduce whatever conclusions can be derived. In backward chaining ,we start from a conclusion,which is the hypothesis we wish to prove,and we aim to show how that conclusion can be reached from the rules and facts in the data base. The conclusion we are aiming to prove is called a goal ,and the reasoning in this way is known as goal-driven. Backward chaining example
Fig : Proof tree constructed by backward chaining to prove that West is criminal. Note: (a) To prove Criminal(West) ,we have to prove four conjuncts below it. (b) Some of which are in knowledge base,and others require further backward chaining.
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Every sentence of first-order logic can be converted into an inferentially equivalent CNF sentence. In particular, the CNF sentence will be unsatisfiable just when the original sentence is unsatisfiable, so we have a basis for doing proofs by contradiction on the CNF sentences. Here we have to eliminate existential quantifiers. We will illustrate the procedure by translating the sentence "Everyone who loves all animals is loved by someone," or
(24) What is Ontological Engineering? Ontology refers to organizing every thing in the world into hierarch of categories. Representing the abastract concepts such as Actions,Time,Physical Objects,and Beliefs is called Ontological Engineering.
(25) How categories are useful in Knowledge representation? CATEGORIES AND OBJECTS
The organization of objects into categories is a vital part of knowledge representation. Although interaction with the world takes place at the level of individual objects, much reasoning takes place at the level of categories.
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What is taxonomy?
Subclass relations organize categories into a taxonomy, or taxonomic hierarchy. Taxonomies have been used explicitly for centuries in technical fields. For example, systematic biology aims to provide a taxonomy of all living and extinct species; library science has developed a taxonomy of all fields of knowledge, encoded as the Dewey Decimal system; and tax authorities and other government departments have developed extensive taxoriornies of occupations and commercial products. Taxonomies are also an important aspect of general commonsense knowledge. First-order logic makes it easy to state facts about categories, either by relating objects to categories or by quantifying over their members:
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(28) Explain the Ontology of Situation calculus. Situations are logical terms consisting of the initial situation (usually called So) and
all situations that are generated by applying an action to a situation. The function Result(a, s) (sometimes called Do) names the situation that results when action a is executed in situation s. Figure 10.2 illustrates this idea. Fluents are functions and predicates that vary from one situation to the next, such as the location of the agent or the aliveness of the wumpus. The dictionary says a fluent is something that fllows, like a liquid. In this use, it means flowing or changing across situations. By convention, the situation is always the last argument of a fluent. For example, lHoldzng(G1, So) says that the agent is not holding the gold GI in the initial situation So. Age( Wumpus, So) refers to the wumpus's age in So. Atemporal or eternal predicates and functions are also allowed. Examples include the predicate Gold (GI) and the function LeftLeg Of ( Wumpus).
(30) What are semantic networks? (31) Semantic networks are capable of representing individual objects,categories of objects,and relation among objects. Objects or Ctegory names are represented in ovals and are connected by labeled arcs. Semantic network example