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  2. Frame (artificial intelligence) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Frame_(artificial_intelligence)

    A frame language is a technology used for knowledge representation in artificial intelligence. They are similar to class hierarchies in object-oriented languages although their fundamental design goals are different. Frames are focused on explicit and intuitive representation of knowledge whereas objects focus on encapsulation and information ...

  3. Knowledge representation and reasoning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knowledge_representation...

    Knowledge representation goes hand in hand with automated reasoning because one of the main purposes of explicitly representing knowledge is to be able to reason about that knowledge, to make inferences, assert new knowledge, etc. Virtually all knowledge representation languages have a reasoning or inference engine as part of the system.

  4. Commonsense knowledge (artificial intelligence) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonsense_knowledge...

    Commonsense knowledge can underpin a commonsense reasoning process, to attempt inferences such as "You might bake a cake because you want people to eat the cake." A natural language processing process can be attached to the commonsense knowledge base to allow the knowledge base to attempt to answer questions about the world. [2]

  5. Reification (knowledge representation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reification_(knowledge...

    Reification allows the representation of assertions so that they can be referred to or qualified by other assertions, i.e., meta-knowledge. [ 3 ] The message "John is six feet tall" is an assertion involving truth that commits the speaker to its factuality, whereas the reified statement "Mary reports that John is six feet tall" defers such ...

  6. Conceptual dependency theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conceptual_dependency_theory

    Schank developed the model to represent knowledge for natural language input into computers. Partly influenced by the work of Sydney Lamb, his goal was to make the meaning independent of the words used in the input, i.e. two sentences identical in meaning would have a single representation. The system was also intended to draw logical inferences.

  7. Description logic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Description_logic

    Description logics (DL) are a family of formal knowledge representation languages. Many DLs are more expressive than propositional logic but less expressive than first-order logic . In contrast to the latter, the core reasoning problems for DLs are (usually) decidable , and efficient decision procedures have been designed and implemented for ...

  8. Outline of knowledge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_knowledge

    Commonsense knowledge base – database containing all the general knowledge that most people possess, represented in a way that it is available to artificial intelligence programs that use natural language or make inferences about the ordinary world. Knowledge graph – another name for ontology; Knowledge representation (AI)

  9. Category:Knowledge representation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Knowledge...

    Class (knowledge representation) Closed-world assumption; Cognitive categorization; Cognitive map; Colon classification; Completeness (knowledge bases) Composite Capability/Preference Profiles; Composite portrait; Computer Science Ontology; Concept map; Concepticon; Conceptual graph; Conceptualization (information science) Consistency ...