The use of lexicons in information retrieval in legal databases
Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Artificial intelligence and law
Information technology at the turn of teh millennium: past, present, and future trends
ACM SIGMIS Database - Special issue on infomration systems: current issues and future changes
Why bother?: ethical computers - that's why!
CRPIT '00 Selected papers from the second Australian Institute conference on Computer ethics
HAL's long, long run: computers and social performance in Stanley Kubrick's 2001
ACM SIGCAS Computers and Society
Computing Machines Can't Be Intelligent (...and Turing Said So)
Minds and Machines
Ethics and Information Technology
Guest Editors' Introduction: Semisentient Robots-- Routes to Integrated Intelligence
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Computer
A flexible distributed architecture for NLP system development and use
ACL '99 Proceedings of the 37th annual meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics on Computational Linguistics
Design of systems on a chip: introduction
Design of system on a chip
Improving English Pronunciation: An Automated Instructional Approach
Information Technologies and International Development
IBM's Chess Players: On AI and Its Supplements
The Information Society
Beyond the individual: new insights on language, cognition and robots
Connection Science - Language and Robots
Are we living in a robot cargo cult?
Proceedings of the 4th ACM/IEEE international conference on Human robot interaction
Meta-agency and individual power
Web Intelligence and Agent Systems
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From the Publisher:"I became operational . . . in Urbana, Illinois, on January 12, 1997." Inspired by HAL's self-proclaimed birth date, HAL's Legacy reflects upon science fiction's most famous computer and explores the relationship between science fantasy and technological fact. The informative, nontechnical chapters written especially for this book describe many of the areas of computer science critical to the design of intelligent machines, discuss whether scientists in the 1960s were accurate about the prospects for advancement in their fields, and look at how HAL has influenced scientific research. Contributions by leading scientists look at the technologies that would be critical if we were, as Arthur Clarke and Stanley Kubrick imagined thirty years ago, to try and build HAL in 1997: supercomputers, fault-tolerance and reliability, planning, artificial intelligence, lipreading, speech recognition and synthesis, commonsense reasoning, the ability to recognize and display emotion, and human-machine interaction. Not only would these technologies be critical in building HAL, but all are being explored for the design of today's intelligent machines. A separate chapter by philosopher Daniel Dennett considers the ethical implications of intelligent machines. Profusely illustrated with color images from the film and from current research, HAL's Legacy provides surprising new perspectives on key moments in the film - you will never view 2001 the same way again.