
Goldberg, University of Illinois`The research reported in this book is a tour de force. To remaining skeptics who doubt the inventive competence of genetics and evolution, I say read this book and change your mind or risk the strong possibility that your doubts will soon cause you significant intellectual embarrassment
- Title : Genetic Programming IV: Routine Human-Competitive Machine Intelligence
- Author : John R. Koza
- Rating : 4.84 (814 Vote)
- Publish : 2014-1-28
- Format : Paperback
- Pages : 590 Pages
- Asin : 0387250670
- Language : English
Goldberg, University of Illinois`The research reported in this book is a tour de force. To remaining skeptics who doubt the inventive competence of genetics and evolution, I say read this book and change your mind or risk the strong possibility that your doubts will soon cause you significant intellectual embarrassment.'David E. To specialists in any of the fields covered by this book's sample problem areas, I say read this book and discover the computer-augmented inventions that are your destiny. For the first time since the idea was bandied about in the 1940s and the early 1950s, we have a set of examples of human-competitive automatic programming.'John H. `Genetic Programming IV: Routine Human-Competitive MachineIntelligence, demonstrates the everyday solution of such `holy grail' problems as the automatic synthesis of analog circuits, the design of automatic controllers, and the automated programming of computers. I strongly recommend it.'Bernard Widrow, Electrical Engineering Dept., StanfordI love this manga and I couldn't be happier that SuBLime is publishing the whole series.SuBLime again gives us the wonderful original color page, and the rest of the book looks great as well. Excellent book for teaching young readers to begin reading; my granddaughter finds these books fascinating and she likes to read them as bedtime stories.. And kids will love it, too--matter of fact, my brother and his best friend used to stage famous assassinatons on our lawn in the summer; their favorite was the Archduke Ferdinand who is sadly NOT included on this vacation. If some other reviewers are rankled by her occasional forays into political commentary--let's just say she's a way mo' better writer than B. This is a truly wonderful book, richly researched and deeply thorough without overwhelming the reader. Yes, it was a difficult read, but it was also an inspiring one. And yet, Bethany can't figure out how to talk to other teenagers when they use slang or reference pop culture? She finds herself tongue-tied and completely obsessed by the first (literally the first, I'm serious) good looking boy she sees. Frank Sinatra called on Blaine for his 1960s classics whenever they had even the slightest pop-rock feeling (think "That's Life", "The Summer Wind", "Something Stupid", etc) and he was also heard in mostThe book describes fifteen instances where GP has created an entity that either infringes or duplicates the functionality of a previously patented 20th-century invention, six instances where it has done the same with respect to post-2000 patented inventions, two instances where GP has created a patentable new invention, and thirteen other human-competitive results. Genetic Programming IV: Routine Human-Competitive Machine Intelligence presents the application of GP to a wide variety of problems involving automated synthesis of controllers, circuits, antennas, genetic networks, and metabolic pathways. The book additionally establishes: GP now delivers routine human-competitive machine intelligenceGP is an automated invention machineGP can create general solutions to problems in the form of parameterized topologiesGP has delivered qualitatively more substantial results in synchrony with the relentless iteration of Moore's Law


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