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Course Details |
Fees and Dates
Later Year Course
| Offered By: |
Department of Computer Science |
| Academic Career: |
Undergraduate |
| Course Subject: |
Computer Science |
| Offered in: |
First Semester, 2010 |
| Unit Value: |
6 units |
| Course Description: |
Artificial intelligence is the science that studies and develops methods of making computers more /intelligent/. The focus of this course is on core AI techniques for knowledge representation, search, reasoning, learning and designing intelligent agents. The course also aims to give an overview of other topics within AI, such as for example robotics, and of the historical, philosophical, and logical foundations of AI. |
| Learning Outcomes: |
Upon completion of this course, the students will:
- have a global picture of artificial intelligence and some of its main subareas;
- have knowledge about actual problems, approaches, and algorithms in areas such as agents, search, knowledge representation and reasoning, planning, and learning;
- have experience with programming solving techniques in some of the five areas listed above;
- have overview knowledge in areas such as vision, robotics and natural language processing.
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| Indicative Assessment: |
Assignments (50%); Final Exam (50%) |
| Workload: |
Thirty one-hour lectures, six tutorials and six laboratory sessions |
| Areas of Interest: |
Computer Science |
| Requisite Statement: |
COMP2100 or COMP2500; and COMP2600 |
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