DocumentCode
486578
Title
Multi-System Report Integration using Blackboards
Author
Delaney, John R.
Author_Institution
Knowledge Systems Laboratory, Stanford University, 701 Welch Road, Building C, Palo Alto, CA 94303
fYear
1986
fDate
18-20 June 1986
Firstpage
457
Lastpage
462
Abstract
Blackboards are an AI problem solving methodology. A blackboard system consists of a structured data base (the blackboard) holding input and derived inferences and a collection of procedures for deriving inferences (knowledge sources). Each knowledge source is specialized to operate on some portion of the blackboard. The knowledge sources are invoked opportunistically as the information on the blackboard increases. The best known applications of the blackboard methodology have been in speech understanding and passive sonar data interpretation. The inputs in these cases were a single form of raw sensor data. But the methodology is also well suited to integrating multiple streams of fully reduced and qualitatively different data such as active radar track reports, passive electronic intelligence reports, and human intelligence reports about enemy intentions. This paper sketches the nature of the blackboard problem solving methodology with an emphasis on those features suiting it to such applications. The sketch is illustrated with examples from a relatively simple multi-system report integration problem. Relevant applications currently under development at Stanford´s Knowledge Systems Laboratory are also described.
Keywords
Artificial intelligence; Humans; Intelligent sensors; Knowledge based systems; Laboratories; Passive radar; Problem-solving; Radar tracking; Sonar applications; Speech;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
American Control Conference, 1986
Conference_Location
Seattle, WA, USA
Type
conf
Filename
4788985
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