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Explorer
Knowledge-Based Systems
Technology Analyst: Rob Edmonds
Phone: +44-(0)20-8686-5555
Fax: +44-(0)20-8760-0635
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Viewpoints
About This Technology
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Viewpoints
  2008
July - Artificial Intelligence in Mass-Market Photo-Recognition Applications
June - Autonomous Vehicles
May - Recent Developments: Artificial Intelligence Will Power New "Sensitive-Listener" User Interface • Yahoo Commits to Microformats for Semantic Web • Artificial-Intelligence Software Defeats "Go" Master
April - How Knowledge-Based Systems Relate to the Rest of Artificial Intelligence
March - Recent Developments: Microsoft Research Is Trying to Forecast "Surprise" Events • MIT's Computer Science and Neuroscience Teams Combine to Improve Vision Systems
February - Intelligent Surveillance Software
 
  2007
Dec/Jan - 2007: The Year in Review
Look for These Developments in 2008
November - Targeted Digital Advertising: A New Opportunity for KBS?
October - Bootstrapped Learning: A New Approach to Machine Learning
September - Value Chains for Knowledge-Based–Systems Products
Announcement: Explorer Technology Area Virtual Environments Becomes Virtual Worlds
August - Recent Developments: Knowledge-Based Systems for Computer-Games Characters • The Divorce Machine
July - Progress in Swarm Theory and Applications of Intelligent Software Agents
New Technology Area: User Interfaces
June - Recent Developments: Multiagent Software for Firefighters' Simulation-Based Training • Development and Deployment of Clinical Decision Support Systems in the United States
May - Recent Developments: Researchers at Xerox use Natural-Language–Understanding Interface to Control Image-Editing Software • Software Agents Using Web-Services Description Language to Carry out Human-Level Tasks
April - Recent Developments: Opportunities and Obstacles in Computerized Medical Diagnosis • One Airborne Pilot Flying Swarm of Unmanned Aircraft
March - Microsoft Buys Medstory, and Expands Health Business
February - Developments in Ontologies
 
  1996–2006 Viewpoints archive  >>



About This Technology

As the first major commercialization of artificial-intelligence research, knowledge-based systems embody a paradigm of computing that has a wide array of useful applications. Relying on the interaction between logical procedures and known facts to conduct searches for solutions, KBS technology offers the capacity to capture and retain scarce human expertise, to aid and inform expert decision making, to improve nonexpert decision making, and to solve specific kinds of complex or time-consuming problems more efficiently. Probabilistic systems, including Bayesian networks, a variant of conventional knowledge-based systems, are becoming increasingly common, thanks to improvements in underlying theory and to dramatically improved hardware, which enables more complex calculations. The addition of machine-learning capabilities has also improved knowledge-based systems dramatically and expanded their use in real-time applications in mobile robots.

The technology has already undergone a boom-and-bust cycle, fueled by initially unrealistic expectations and hype. A number of early adopting companies presided over large-scale KBS debacles, most of which occurred precisely because of the companies' overly ambitious faith in the concept of artificial intelligence rather than in the reality of KBS technology. However, another class of users—the companies that implemented the technology on a smaller scale and treated it as just another tool with its own unique assets and limitations—has seen significant benefits. The technology yields competitive advantage within the right set of parameters.

The future appears to be particularly bright for hybrid systems that derive their "expertise" by combining automated extraction of knowledge from data with human experts in specific knowledge domains. Mixed-initiative systems, which combine knowledge-based systems and artificial intelligence with human-computer interfaces, represent a growing synergy of complimentary technologies. In addition, knowledge-based systems combine synergistically with databases, geographic information systems, and the technology that underlies the World Wide Web, providing great opportunities and benefits, but becoming ever more invisible with integration into larger information systems. These hybrid systems will become increasingly popular as the increasingly digital world gives rise to massive amounts of data that require analysis and as people turn to experts to help them deal with greater complexity and uncertainty.



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