Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cognitive_computing> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 82 of
82
with 100 triples per page.
- Cognitive_computing abstract "Cognitive computing (CC), a buzzword and computing concept by IBM, aims at making a human kinds of problems computable. It addresses complex situations that are characterized by ambiguity and uncertainty. In dynamic, information-rich, and shifting situations, data tends to change frequently, and it is often conflicting. The goals of users evolve as they learn more and redefine their objectives. To respond to the fluid nature of users’ understanding of their problems, the cognitive computing system offers a synthesis not just of information sources but of influences, contexts, and insights. To do this, systems often need to weigh conflicting evidence and suggest an answer that is “best” rather than “right”.According to IBM cognitive computing describes “systems that learn at scale, reason with purpose and interact with humans naturally.”Cognitive systems are probabilistic. They generate not just answers to numerical problems, but hypotheses, reasoned arguments and recommendations about more complex — and meaningful — bodies of dataWhile some AI systems like Facebook’s facial recognition software use machine learning and image recognition, they only function for their designed purpose and do not create a deeper human engagement that reasons through data to determine what matters to a person. Cognitive computing sidesteps the human intervention into machine programming and learning.Cognitive computing systems make context computable. They identify and extract context features such as hour, location, task, history or profile to present an information set that is appropriate for an individual or for a dependent application engaged in a specific process at a specific time and place. They provide machine-aided serendipity by wading through massive collections of diverse information to find patterns and then apply those patterns to respond to the needs of the moment.Cognitive computing systems redefine the nature of the relationship between people and their increasingly pervasive digital environment. They may play the role of assistant or coach for the user, and they may act virtually autonomously in many problem-solving situations. The boundaries of the processes and domains these systems will affect are still elastic and emergent. Their output may be prescriptive, suggestive, instructive, or simply entertaining.In order to achieve this new level of computing, cognitive systems must be: Adaptive: They must learn as information changes, and as goals and requirements evolve. They must resolve ambiguity and tolerate unpredictability. They must be engineered to feed on dynamic data in real time, or near real time. Interactive: They must interact easily with users so that those users can define their needs comfortably. They may also interact with other processors, devices, and Cloud services, as well as with people. Iterative and stateful: They must aid in defining a problem by asking questions or finding additional source input if a problem statement is ambiguous or incomplete. They must “remember” previous interactions in a process and return information that is suitable for the specific application at that point in time. Contextual: They must understand, identify, and extract contextual elements such as meaning, syntax, time, location, appropriate domain, regulations, user’s profile, process, task and goal. They may draw on multiple sources of information, including both structured and unstructured digital information, as well as sensory inputs (visual, gestural, auditory, or sensor-provided).Although CC are capable of basic computing (tabulating and calculating based on preconfigured rules and programs), they can also infer and even reason based on broad objectives. Beyond these principles, cognitive computing systems can be extended to include additional tools and technologies. They may integrate or leverage existing information systems and add domain or task-specific interfaces and tools as required. Many of today’s applications (e.g., search, eCommerce, eDiscovery) exhibit some of these features, but it is rare to find all of them fully integrated and interactive.Like a human, a cognitive computing application learns by experience and/or instruction. The CC application learns and remembers how to adapt its content displays, by situation, to influence behavior. This means a CC application must have intent, memory, foreknowledge and cognitive reasoning for a domain of variable situations. These 'cognitive' functions are in addition to the more fixed page displays now found in most paging applications.IBM predicts that cognitive systems will coexist with legacy systems into the indefinite future. Many cognitive systems will build upon today’s IT resources.".
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageExternalLink Gilboa.pdf.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageExternalLink ibm-gets-darpa-cognitive-computing-contract.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageExternalLink Cognitive-computing-Beyond-the-hype-97685.aspx.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageExternalLink Cognitive-computing-Why-now-and-why-it-matters-98770.aspx.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageExternalLink universities-join-ibm-in-cognitive-computing-research-project.html.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageExternalLink fbid=BrUXYNtK6-r.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageExternalLink UPI-73871258566950.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageID "42581062".
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageLength "9896".
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageOutDegree "39".
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageRevisionID "707172084".
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Adaptive_system.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Adaptive_user_interface.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Affect_(psychology).
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Affective_computing.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Analytics.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Antonio_Damasio.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Artificial_intelligence.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Artificial_neural_network.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Category:Artificial_intelligence.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cognitive_science.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Computer_vision.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Context_awareness.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Data_analysis.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink E-commerce.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Electronic_discovery.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Facebook.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Facial_recognition.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Foreknowledge.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Human_brain.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Hypothesis.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink IBM.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Inference.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Interactivity.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Lawrence_Weiskrantz.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Legacy_system.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Machine_learning.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Meaning.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Mind.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Natural_language_processing.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Probability.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Problem_solving.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Reason.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Social_neuroscience.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink State_(computer_science).
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Syntax.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Unstructured_data.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Usability.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLink Web_search_engine.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cognitive computing".
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageWikiLinkText "cognitive computing".
- Cognitive_computing author "Sue Feldman".
- Cognitive_computing revision "624869755".
- Cognitive_computing sourcearticle "Cognitive Computing Definition".
- Cognitive_computing sourcepath "http://synthexis.com/cognitive-computing/".
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:CCBYSASource.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:COI.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Colbegin.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Colend.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Merge_to.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:More_footnotes.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Multiple_issues.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refbegin.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refend.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Cognitive_computing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:See_also.
- Cognitive_computing subject Category:Artificial_intelligence.
- Cognitive_computing subject Category:Cognitive_science.
- Cognitive_computing type Thing.
- Cognitive_computing comment "Cognitive computing (CC), a buzzword and computing concept by IBM, aims at making a human kinds of problems computable. It addresses complex situations that are characterized by ambiguity and uncertainty. In dynamic, information-rich, and shifting situations, data tends to change frequently, and it is often conflicting. The goals of users evolve as they learn more and redefine their objectives.".
- Cognitive_computing label "Cognitive computing".
- Cognitive_computing seeAlso Watson_(computer).
- Cognitive_computing sameAs Q17008161.
- Cognitive_computing sameAs Computació_Cognitiva.
- Cognitive_computing sameAs コグニティブコンピューティング.
- Cognitive_computing sameAs m.010fc3zq.
- Cognitive_computing sameAs Q17008161.
- Cognitive_computing wasDerivedFrom Cognitive_computing?oldid=707172084.
- Cognitive_computing isPrimaryTopicOf Cognitive_computing.