On the Storage Economy of Inferential Question-Answering Systems
暂无分享,去创建一个
The possibility of gaining storage space is an argument often advanced in favor of permitting question-answering systems to make occasional errors. Absolute bounds are established on the amount of memory savings that is achievable with a specified error level for certain types of question-answering systems. Question-answering systems are treated as communication channels carrying information concerning the acceptable answers to an admissible set of queries. Shannon's rate-distortion theory is used to calculate bounds on the memory required for several question-answering tasks. For data retrieval, pattern classification, and position-matching systems, it was found that only small memory gains could be materialized from error tolerance. In pair-ordering tasks, on the other hand, more significant memory savings could be accomplished if small error rates are tolerated.
[1] Michael O. Rabin. Theoretical Impediments to Artificial Intelligence , 1974, IFIP Congress.
[2] Lotfi A. Zadeh,et al. Outline of a New Approach to the Analysis of Complex Systems and Decision Processes , 1973, IEEE Trans. Syst. Man Cybern..
[3] John T. Pinkston. An application of rate-distortion theory to a converse to the coding theorem , 1969, IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory.
[4] Ranan B. Banerji. Some linguistic and statistical problems in pattern recognition , 1970, Pattern Recognit..