| W. Maass. From visual perception to multimodal communication: Incremental route descriptions. AI Review Journal, 8(2-3), 1994. 258 |
.... can make use of specialized mapping techniques to explore unknown environments [12, 45, 46] Image databases are using retrieval techniques based on spatial models [8, 7, 52] and there are projects in natural language processing for producing natural language descriptions of a spatial scene [3, 39, 53, 77], and for visualizing a spatial scene based on natural language descriptions [29, 49, 56, 65] 1 Further, within the research area of Qualitative Reasoning [89, 43] the topic area of this dissertation, many spatial models have been proposed for performing a number of diverse tasks, including, ....
....Spatial Models To answer these questions, consider the following observations about the previously developed spatial models. The previous work can be roughly divided into two categories: work toward the development of spatial models to support specific, complex real world applications (e.g. [23, 53]) and work toward the development of formal, intuitive theories for qualitative spatial reasoning (e.g. 25, 33, 11] The most powerful spatial models are associated with the former category, 5 and allow reasoning about both static worlds and worlds where is translation and rotational motion. ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
W. Maass. From visual perception to multimodal communication: Incremental route descriptions. AI Review Journal, 8(2-3), 1994. 258
Online articles have much greater impact More about CiteSeer.IST Add search form to your site Submit documents Feedback
CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC