| D. Fogel. Review of computational intelligence imitating life, edited by J.M. Zurada, R.J. Marks, and C.J. Robinson, IEEE Press, 1994. |
....(NN) were grouped under the name computational intelligence (CI) The most in uential pioneering publication from Marks and Bezdek date back to the early nineties. The major scienti c event often seen as marking the birth of the new eld has been the IEEE World Congress on Computational Intelligence in 1994, Orlando, Florida. It featured three simultaneous conferences, the IEEE International Conference on Evolutionary Computation, Fuzzy Systems, and Neural Networks. 2 What is computational intelligence Although used fairly widespread, there is no commonly accepted de nition of the term ....
....interpretations of the term CI along the lines of development (quasi chronologically) The rst published de nition is due to J.C. Bezdek who states that: strictly) computational systems depend on numerical data supplied by manufactured sensors and do not rely upon knowledge . Later, in 1994, Bezdek o ers that CI is low level computation in the style of the mind , whereas AI is mid level computation in the style of the mind . The envisioned di erence is that mid level systems include knowledge (tidbits) while low level systems do not. According to this perception, computational ....
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D. Fogel. Review of computational intelligence imitating life, edited by J.M. Zurada, R.J. Marks, and C.J. Robinson, IEEE Press, 1994.
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