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Eric Kimball Jones. Case-based analogical reasoning using proverbs. In Kristian Hammond, editor, Proceedings: Case Based Reasoning Workshop, pages 275 -- 279. Morgan Kaufmann, 1989.

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Choosing a Knowledge Based System to Support a Help Desk - Dearden, Bridge (1992)   (Correct)

....an element, or elements of the source and target domains. Some analogical systems store their knowledge of the source domain in the form of examples, and would therefore be covered by our description of EBR. Others store their knowledge of the source domain in the form of a domain model [Sei89, Jon89, Car86] ffl Prototype Based Reasoning: This is closely related to CBR but stores elements of a previously seen case, abstracted as general prototypes, which can then be used to analyse new examples (see, e.g. RL91, TL89] ffl Schema Based Reasoning: has been presented as a generalisation of ....

Eric Kimball Jones. Case-based analogical reasoning using proverbs. In Kristian Hammond, editor, Proceedings: Case Based Reasoning Workshop, pages 275 -- 279. Morgan Kaufmann, 1989.


A Memory Model for Case Retrieval by Activation Passing - Brown (1994)   (12 citations)  (Correct)

....situations. The root cause of this fragility is that unlike human problem solvers, a KBS is unable to fall back on common sense when its specific expertise is not applicable. Common sense has been described in AI as the ability either to apply generalised (domain independent) knowledge [103, 70] or to adapt knowledge from other domains to the current situation [85] There exist projects, notably [86] that are attempting the massive task of encoding sufficient knowledge for a KBS to begin to exhibit something like common sense. However, such large scale approaches are clearly not ....

....usually too general to allow for selective retrieval of source cases. For example, in some planning systems cases are modelled as instances of proverbial advice, such as many hands make light work [103] However, a single proverb will apply to a great number of cases across a range of domains [70]. For example, the above proverb applies equally well to a group of bank robbers attempting to rapidly remove the contents of a bank vault and a school of piranhas attacking a wallowing antelope. Analogical recollections that are this abstract will rarely provide useful information from memory. ....

Eric Kimball Jones. Case-Based Analogical Reasoning using Proverbs. In Proceedings of the Case-Based Reasoning Workshop, pages pp275--279. Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, 1989.

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