What sort of good facilities/labs/mentors are there? If I wanted to study AI there, should I go for CSC instead of ECE? Not that I think it matters too much. I assume it depends on me.
2/11/2013 2:55:28 AM
There are several excellent professors at NCSU who focus on AI. If an undergrad, talk to the CSC undergraduate advisor to get a full list of names and visit them during their office hours. Or, if a graduate student / postdoc talk to the CSC graduate school director to determine who is looking to take on new folks.
2/11/2013 8:43:37 AM
my ex is getting a phd in AI assisted learning at ncsu and it's squarely in CSC.
2/11/2013 10:14:54 AM
It all depends on what you would like to do. AI is a really broad term that can mean a lot of different things. My advisor, Dr. Doyle, is one of the AI professors here and I am familiar with most of the others. Do you have specific interests? It might help you to ask yourself what smaller problems within AI you would like to be involved with. You are not going to work on some sort of Kurzweilian general AI for your graduate work. You should not go into ECE if you want to do AI , especially at NCSU. I looked into this option as well. If you are interested in robotics, I would go to CSC and get an ECE professor to be on your committee. When I came out of undergrad I also wanted to do AI and it's been a long journey since. Feel free to ask questions or shoot me a PM.
2/11/2013 10:16:24 AM
Yeah AI is actually a very broad category. There are guys who work in AI that's much more Linguistics or Learning based (Lester) or Human Factors (St. Amant) vs the more "pure" AI guys.Actually back when I shared some lab space with some of St. Amants guys there were one or two guys who didn't have CSC undergrads who were working on some simple robotics AI. They were doing the software side on prebuilt stuff but you'd be surprised how many AI guys don't come from a pure CSC background.
2/11/2013 10:41:11 AM
There are ECE AI teachers. They are not good.
2/11/2013 11:55:50 AM
Have you looked into operations research?
2/12/2013 11:21:23 AM
Well I do want to work on AGI but more specifically I want to find ways to make analogies between fairly different topics. Also data compression/storage/recall are some things I have ideas for. NLP is something else I could easily get into. Anything involving pattern recognition and knowledge representation really.
2/13/2013 10:48:47 PM
2/14/2013 9:24:44 AM
Yeah hate to break your bubble but we're nowhere close to getting any true "sci-fi" AI. It might be a noble endeavor to do that research but from a practicality standpoint think about the end product you might be interested in working on and work your way back.For instance, if you're interested in talking to a computer and having it do something go NLP.Young and Lester do a lot of work in that area or at least did when I was in school.
2/14/2013 10:38:02 AM
Yeah I realize how far off the real thing is, but that is all the more reason to start now.
2/14/2013 1:08:20 PM
2/14/2013 1:09:18 PM
^ lol yeah just remember that unless you're doing a PhD the program is too massive for your adviser to really give a shit about your Masters work or at least that was what I saw usually.That said I liked my adviser and it was kinda an unspoken thing that I just was there to just to get the piece of paper and salary bump. I wasn't getting funding or anything so it was always just do the work and push on through which both sides were fine with.Probably a different story if you're getting money but that's pretty much reserved for PhD's since the program is like 400 students grad school.
2/14/2013 1:15:03 PM
2/14/2013 1:27:11 PM
Oh yeah I'm totally aware of Hofstadter's status in academia. He is well respected but to the more serious scientist his ideas are more like recreational thinking. Which I have no problem with. I just see a lot of value in his opinions because he isn't directly associated with AI research, which means his perspective on the subject isn't as prone to tunnel vision. He can be more creative without having to worry about his reputation. Sometimes I think it's healthy to be mentally flexible. But then of course it can be a slippery slope into PSEUDO-SCIENCE if you're not careful. Next thing you know you're publishing books about quantum consciousness and the morphogenetic field.
2/14/2013 4:37:19 PM
Bump for this Atlantic article:http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2013/11/the-man-who-would-teach-machines-to-think/309529/
11/2/2013 9:26:05 PM