George
Mason University
School of Engineering
Department of Computer Science
CS 681 Designing Expert Systems
Meeting
time: Monday 4:30 pm – 7:10 pm
Meeting location: Nguyen Engineering Building 1505
Instructor: Dr. Gheorghe Tecuci,
Professor of Computer Science
Office
hours: Tuesday and Thursday 4:30 pm – 5:20
pm
Office: Nguyen Engineering Building, Learning Agents Center, Room 4613
Phone: 703 993 1722
E-mail: tecuci at gmu dot edu
Course Description
Prerequisite: CS 580 or permission of instructor
This course presents the theory and
practice of designing and developing systems that rely on expert knowledge and
reasoning to solve complex problems in a specific (scientific, engineering,
medical, intelligence, military, etc.) domain. Such an expert system or agent act
as problem-solving assistant to experts, as consultant to non-experts, and as
intelligent tutor to students. Capturing, using, preserving, transferring, and
sharing knowledge is of critical importance to any organization as our society
evolves from an information one to a knowledge one. Therefore, the ability to
design and develop such expert agents for a wide variety of domains is a highly
valuable expertise. The course covers both the basics of expert agents and
knowledge engineering as well as advanced research topics. Basic topics include
modeling expert reasoning, evidence-based reasoning, ontology design and
development, knowledge acquisition and learning, knowledge base verification
and validation. Advanced topics include discovery, mixed-initiative reasoning,
agent teaching and multistrategy learning.
The students will learn about all
the phases of building an expert agent and will experience them first-hand by
using the Disciple development environment. Disciple has been developed in the Learning Agents Center (http://lac.gmu.edu)
of George Mason University and has been successfully used to build expert
agents for a variety of domains, including: intelligence analysis, military
center of gravity determination, course of action
critiquing, emergency response planning, teaching critical thinking, medical
diagnosis, website evaluation, and PhD advisor assessment.
The classes will consist of three
parts: theory, tools and project. In the theoretical part, the instructor will
present and discuss the various methods of building an expert agent. In the
second part the students will experience the use of advanced artificial
intelligence tools for building expert agents. In the project part the students
will design and develop an expert agent in a domain of their choice.
Students will have accounts on
Blackboard and can download the lecture notes by going to courses.gmu.edu and
logging in using their Mason ID and passwords.
The Disciple development environment
is available only for Windows. If you have a Macintosh computer and want to
install the software on it, you will have to use either a virtual machine or BootCamp to install Windows on your Macintosh computer. VMWare
Fusion and Windows are available at no charge through your enrollment in
Volgenau School courses. Instructions for obtaining the software are in the
Microsoft DreamSpark & VMWare FAQs on http://labs.vse.gmu.edu
Course
Topics
·
Overview of Knowledge Engineering
and Expert Agents
·
Evidence-Based Reasoning: Connecting
the Dots
·
Methodologies and Tools for Agent
Design and Development
·
Modeling the Problem Solving Process
·
Ontologies
·
Ontology Design and Development
·
Reasoning with Ontologies and Rules
·
Learning for Knowledge-Based Agents
·
Rule Learning
·
Rule Refinement
·
Abstraction of Reasoning
·
Design Principles for Personal
Learning Assistants
Grading Policy
·
Assignments and Class participation:
20%
·
Project: 30%
·
Mid-term Exam: 25%
·
Final Exam: 25%
Readings
·
Tecuci G., Marcu D., Boicu M., and
Schum D.A. (2014). Knowledge Engineering (required
textbook provided by the instructor).
·
Tecuci G., Lecture Notes on Designing Expert Systems, Fall
2014 (required notes provided by the instructor).
·
Additional papers required or
recommended by the instructor.
Email
Communication
·
Please use your Mason email and include CS681 in the
subject of any message you are emailing to Dr. Tecuci.
·
Please try to limit the size of the files you are
emailing.
Mason
Email Accounts
Students must activate their Mason email accounts to
receive important University information, including messages related to this
class.
Office
of Disability Services
If you are a student with a disability and you need
academic accommodations, please see me and contact the Office of Disability
Services (ODS) at 993-2474. All academic accommodations must be arranged
through the ODS. http://ods.gmu.edu.
Other
Useful Campus Resources
·
Writing Center: A114 Robinson Hall; (703) 993-1200; http://writingcenter.gmu.edu
·
University Libraries “Ask a Librarian” http://library.gmu.edu/ask
·
Counseling And Psychological Services (CAPS): (703)
993-2380; http://caps.gmu.edu
University
Policies
The University Catalog, http://catalog.gmu.edu, is the central resource for university policies affecting student,
faculty, and staff conduct in university affairs. You may also review the
University Policy web site, http://universitypolicy.gmu.edu/
Honor
Code
You
are expected to abide by the Mason honor code. Information on the university
honor code can be found at http://academicintegrity.gmu.edu/honorcode/.
Additional departmental CS information: http://cs.gmu.edu/wiki/pmwiki.php/HonorCode/CSHonorCodePolicies