IIC Journal of Innovation 11th Edition | Page 6

Industrial Artificial Intelligence LISP (LISt Processor) 3 supported representing structured programs and their data in the same list format. Could a computer program modify and extend itself? Certainly, at a minimum we can accomplish this today with discovery and tuning of configuration parameters, and runtime code patching is used in adaptive programming. A UTOMATION O RIGINS The dream of mechanical automation goes back to the beginnings of human history 1 . Water flow and hydraulics were used to control movement as far back as 1500 BCE, and steam was leveraged as an automation force in 300 BCE. Leonardo Da Vinci designed and implemented his Robot Knight in 1495 using pulley and cables. In the 17 th century, automation was used to play musical instruments and animate what appeared to be living things. Mechanical computation to support automation was introduced with the Analytical Engine in 1842, and these techniques have evolved into our modern digital computers. A CADEMIC O RIGINS AI for industrial applications bridged from academic research. Edward Feigenbaum from Stanford collaborated with the University of Michigan, University of Pittsburgh and Rockefeller University on DENDRAL 4 , an expert system for scientific hypothesis formulation. This provided the basis for MYCIN 5 where the techniques were applied in medicine. Expert systems were an attractive approach because the pruned search of the solution space could be explained. Artificial Intelligence (AI) is our attempt to replicate human cognitive function. Just like we strived to duplicate the function and value from animal and human labor, the vision of machines and programs with greater autonomy has driven research and experimentation. Stanford University has records 2 on AI dating back to the 1960s. Back then a new programming language called Neural networks, on the other hand, stemmed from neurological science and attempted to replicate how our brains worked. At Cornell University, Frank 1 Spaeth, D., “From Single-Task Machines to Backflipping Robots: The Evolution of Robots”, Cutting Tool Engineering (January 2018). https://www.ctemag.com/news/articles/evolution-of-robots 2 The History of Artificial Intelligence, Stanford Libraries. https://exhibits.stanford.edu/ai 3 Berkeley, E.C., “The Programming Language LISP: An Introduction and Appraisal”, Computers and Automation (September 1964). https://archive.org/details/bitsavers_computersA_6908895/page/n15 4 Lindsay, R.K., Buchanan, B.G., Feigenbaum, E.A., Lederberg, J., “DENDRAL: a case study of the first expert system for scientific hypothesis formulation”, Artificial Intelligence vol. 61, Elsevier (1993). 5 Buchanan, B.G., Shortliffe, E.D. “Rule-based expert systems: the MYCIN experiments of the Stanford Heuristic Programming Project” (1984). IIC Journal of Innovation - 2 -