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An evaluation of the application of the intelligent building (IB) technology in the development of Hong Kong's buildings industryTsui, Ming-kei. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.Hous.Man.)--University of Hong Kong, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 84-88).
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Rational interactionMcBurney, Peter John January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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THE IMPACT OF DIFFERENT PROOF STRATEGIES ON LEARNING GEOMETRY THEOREM PROVINGMatsuda, Noboru 04 February 2005 (has links)
Two problem solving strategies, forward chaining and backward chaining, were compared to see how they affect students' learning of geometry theorem proving with construction. It has been claimed that backward chaining is inappropriate for novice students due to its complexity. On the other hand, forward chaining may not be appropriate either for this particular task because it can explode combinatorially. In order to determine which strategy accelerates learning the most, an intelligent tutoring system was developed. It is unique in two ways: (1) It has a fine grained cognitive model of proof-writing, which captured both observable and unobservable inference steps. This allows the tutor to provide elaborate scaffolding. (2) Depending on the student's competence, the tutor provides a variety of scaffolding from showing precise steps to just prompting students for a next step. In other words, the students could learn proof-writing through both worked-out examples (by observing a model of proof-writing generated by the tutor) and problem solving (by writing proofs by themselves). 52 students were randomly assigned to one of the tutoring systems. They solved 11 geometry proof problems with and without construction with the aid from the intelligent tutor. The results show that (1) the students who learned forward chaining showed better performance on proof-writing than those who learned backward chaining, (2) both forward and backward chaining conditions wrote wrong proofs equally frequently, (3) both forward and backward chaining conditions seldom wrote redundant or wrong statements when they wrote correct proofs, (4) the major reason for the difficulty in applying backward chaining lay in the assertion of premises as unjustified propositions (i.e., subgoaling). These results provide theoretical implications for the design of tutoring systems for problem solving.
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An evaluation of decision-theoretic tutorial action selectionMurray, Robert Charles 05 October 2005 (has links)
A novel decision-theoretic architecture for intelligent tutoring systems, DT Tutor (DT), was fleshed out into a complete ITS and evaluated. DT uses a dynamic decision network to probabilistically look ahead to anticipate how its tutorial actions will influence the student and other aspects of the tutorial state. It weighs its preferences regarding multiple competing objectives by the probabilities that they will occur and then selects the tutorial action with maximum expected utility.
The evaluation was conducted in two phases. First, logs were recorded from interactions of students with a Random Tutor (RT) that was identical to DT except that it selected randomly from relevant tutorial actions. The logs were used to learn many of DTs key probabilities for its model of the tutorial state. Second, the logs were replayed to record the actions that DT and a Fixed-Policy Tutor (FT) would select for a large sample of scenarios. FT was identical to DT except that it selected tutorial actions by emulating the fixed policies of Cognitive Tutors, which are theoretically based, widely used, and highly effective. The possible action selections for each scenario were rated by a panel of judges who were skilled human tutors. The main hypotheses tested were that DTs action selections would be rated higher than FTs and higher than RTs. This was the first comparison of a decision-theoretic tutor with a non-trivial competitor.
DT was rated higher than FT overall and for all subsets of scenarios except help requests, for which it was rated equally. DT was also rated much higher than RT. The judges preferred that the tutors provide proactive help and the study design permitted this information to be put to use right away to develop and evaluate enhanced versions of DT and FT. The enhanced versions of DT and FT were rated about equally and higher than non-enhanced DT except on help requests. The variability of the actions selected by both non-enhanced and enhanced versions of DT demonstrated more sensitivity to the tutorial state than the actions selected by non-enhanced and enhanced versions of FT.
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COMPUTATIONAL ANALYSIS OF KNOWLEDGE SHARING IN COLLABORATIVE DISTANCE LEARNINGSoller, Amy L 14 April 2003 (has links)
The rapid advance of distance learning and networking technology has enabled universities and corporations to reach out and educate students across time and space barriers. This technology supports structured, on-line learning activities, and provides facilities for assessment and collaboration. Structured collaboration, in the classroom, has proven itself a successful and uniquely powerful learning method. Online collaborative learners, however, do not enjoy the same benefits as face-to-face learners because the technology provides no guidance or direction during online discussion sessions. Integrating intelligent facilitation agents into collaborative distance learning environments may help bring the benefits of the supportive classroom closer to distance learners.
In this dissertation, I describe a new approach to analyzing and supporting online peer interaction. The approach applies Hidden Markov Models, and Multidimensional Scaling with a threshold-based clustering method, to analyze and assess sequences of coded on-line student interaction. These analysis techniques were used to train a system to dynamically recognize when and why students may be experiencing breakdowns while sharing knowledge and learning from each other. I focus on knowledge sharing interaction because students bring a great deal of specialized knowledge and experiences to the group, and how they share and assimilate this knowledge shapes the collaboration and learning processes. The results of this research could be used to dynamically inform and assist an intelligent instructional agent in facilitating knowledge sharing interaction, and helping to improve the quality of online learning interaction.
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Caveats for Causal Reasoning with Equilibrium ModelsDash, Denver 23 May 2003 (has links)
This thesis raises objections to the use of causal reasoning with equilibrium models. I consider two operators that are used to transform models: the {em Do} operator for modeling manipulation and the {em Equilibration} operator for modeling a system that has achieved equilibrium. I introduce a property of a causal model called the {em EMC Property} that is true iff the {em Do} operator commutes with the {em Equilibration} operator. I prove that not all models obey the EMC property, and I demonstrate empirically that when inferring a causal model from data, the learned model will not support causal reasoning if the EMC property is not obeyed. I find sufficient conditions for models to violate and not to violate the EMC property. In addition, I show that there exists a class of models that violate EMC and possess a set of variables whose manipulation will cause an instability in the system. All dynamic models in this class possess feedback, although I do not prove that feedback is a necessary or a sufficient condition for EMC violation. I define the {em Structural Stability Principle} which provides a necessary graphical criterion for stability in causal models. I will argue that the models in this class are quite common given typical assumptions about causal relations.
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Construction and Utilization of Mechanism-based Causal ModelsLu, Tsai-Ching 16 January 2004 (has links)
This dissertation studies how the mechanism-based view of causality can assist in construction and utilization of causal models for decision support. The mechanism-based view of causality is based on the theory of causal ordering, proposed by Simon [53], which explicates causal asymmetries among variables in a self-contained set of simultaneous structural equations. I extend the theory of causal ordering to explicate causal relations in under-constrained sets of structural equations. Considering under constrained models as intermediate representations of one's understanding of decision problems, I demonstrate that a model construction process can be viewed as the process of assembling mechanisms from under-constrained models into self-contained causal models. I formalize the reversibility property of a mechanism to support changes in structure in causal models containing reversible mechanisms. I introduce algorithms for deliberating atomic actions when one considers manipulating a variable or releasing a mechanism to achieve a decision objective. In addition, I introduce the concept of search for opportunities which amounts to both identifying the set of policy variables and computing their optimal setting for a decision objective. Search for opportunities presents decision makers with a list of ranked interventions based on the value of intervention computation. I implement an interactive system called ImaGeNIe that supports mechanism-based model construction and utilization. I conduct subject experiments and find that ImaGeNIe can effectively assist users in constructing causal models for causal reasoning.
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A Comprehensive Evaluation of Reservoir Inflow and Wellbore Behavior in Intelligent WellsZarea, Marwan Annas H. 2010 August 1900 (has links)
Intelligent well technology is a relatively new technology that has been adopted
by many operators in recent years to improve oil and gas recovery. Because of its
complexity, accurate modeling of the reservoir and wellbore performance in the
multilateral well application is critical to optimize well production. Little work has been
performed on understanding the flow behavior through the main component of the
intelligent well, the inflow control valve. This study presents a comprehensive model to
quantify the reservoir and well performance in the horizontal laterals of the intelligent
multilateral well. Moreover, it combines this model with equations to evaluate the flow
rate and pressure profile through the inflow control valves. As a result of this study, the
well performance of intelligent wells can be predicted and optimized.
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A Bayesian Local Causal Discovery FrameworkMani, Subramani 30 March 2006 (has links)
This work introduces the Bayesian local causal discovery framework, a method for discovering unconfounded
causal relationships from observational data. It addresses the hypothesis that causal discovery using
local search methods will outperform causal discovery algorithms that employ global search in the
context of large datasets and limited computational resources.
Several Bayesian local causal discovery (BLCD) algorithms are described and results presented comparing them
with two well-known global causal discovery algorithms PC and FCI, and a global Bayesian network
learning algorithm, the optimal reinsertion (OR) algorithm which was post-processed to
identify relationships that under assumptions are causal.
Methodologically, this research formalizes the task of
causal discovery from observational data using a Bayesian
approach and local search. It specifically investigates the
so called Y structure in causal discovery and
classifies the various types of Y structures
present in the data generating networks. It
identifies the Y structures in the Alarm,
Hailfinder, Barley, Pathfinder and Munin networks and
categorizes them. A proof of the convergence of the BLCD
algorithm based on the identification of Y structures, is
also provided. Principled methods of combining
global and local causal discovery algorithms to improve upon
the performance of the individual algorithms are discussed. In particular,
a post-processing method for identifying plausible causal relationships from the output of global Bayesian
network learning algorithms is described, thereby
extending them to be causal discovery algorithms.
In an experimental evaluation, simulated data from
synthetic causal Bayesian networks representing five
different domains, as well as a real-world medical dataset, were used.
Causal discovery performance was measured using precision and recall.
Sometimes the local methods performed better than the global methods,
and sometimes they did not (both in terms of precision/recall
and in terms of computation time).
When all the datasets were considered in aggregate,
the local methods (BLCD and BLCDpk) had higher precision.
The general performance of the BLCD class of algorithms
was comparable to the global search algorithms, implying that the local
search algorithms will have good performance on
very large datasets when the global methods fail to scale
up. The limitations of this research and directions for
future research are also discussed.
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Importance Sampling for Bayesian Networks: Principles, Algorithms, and PerformanceYuan, Changhe 02 October 2006 (has links)
Bayesian networks (BNs) offer a compact, intuitive, and efficient graphical representation of uncertain relationships among the variables in a domain and have proven their value in many disciplines over the last two decades. However, two challenges become increasingly critical in practical applications of Bayesian networks. First, real models are reaching the size of hundreds or even thousands of nodes. Second, some decision problems are more naturally represented by hybrid models which contain mixtures of
discrete and continuous variables and may represent linear or nonlinear equations and arbitrary probability distributions. Both challenges make building Bayesian network models and reasoning with
them more and more difficult.
In this dissertation, I address the challenges by developing representational and computational solutions based on importance sampling. I First develop a more solid understanding of the properties of importance sampling in the context of Bayesian networks. Then, I address a fundamental question of importance sampling in Bayesian networks, the representation of the importance function. I derive an exact representation for the optimal importance function and propose an approximation strategy for the
representation when it is too complex. Based on these theoretical analysis, I propose a suite of importance sampling-based algorithms for (hybrid) Bayesian networks. I believe the new algorithms
significantly extend the efficiency, applicability, and scalability of approximate inference methods for Bayesian networks. The ultimate goal of this research is to help users to solve difficult reasoning problems emerging from complex decision problems in the most general settings.
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