| "Understanding Natural Language", Terry Winograd, Academic Press, New York, NY, 1972. |
....worked in the presence of simple curved objects, rough texture on the blocks, or without carefully controlled lighting. Nevertheless it reinforced the idea that a complete three dimensional description of the world could be extracted from a visual image. It legitimized the work of others, such as [Winograd 72] whose programs worked in a make believe world of blocks if one program could be built which understood such a world completely and could also manipulate that world, then it was assumed that programs which assumed that abstraction could in fact be connected to the real world without great ....
"Understanding Natural Language", Terry Winograd, Academic Press, New York, NY, 1972.
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