03385nam 22006135 450 99646562420331620200702171824.03-540-46436-010.1007/3-540-46436-0(CKB)1000000000211216(SSID)ssj0000322234(PQKBManifestationID)11248296(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000322234(PQKBWorkID)10287653(PQKB)11690205(DE-He213)978-3-540-46436-5(MiAaPQ)EBC3072952(PPN)155180835(EXLCZ)99100000000021121620121227d2000 u| 0engurnn|008mamaatxtccrConcurrent Reactive Plans[electronic resource] Anticipating and Forestalling Execution Failures /by Michael Beetz1st ed. 2000.Berlin, Heidelberg :Springer Berlin Heidelberg :Imprint: Springer,2000.1 online resource (XVI, 220 p.) Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence ;1772Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph3-540-67241-9 Includes bibliographical references.Reactivity -- Planning -- Transparent Reactive Plans -- Representing Plan Revisions -- Forestalling Behavior Flaws -- Planning Ongoing Activities -- Evaluation -- Conclusion.In this book, the author presents a new computational model of forestalling common flaws in autonomous robot behavior. To this end, robots are equipped with structured reactive plans (SRPs) which are concurrent control programs that can not only be interpreted but also be reasoned about and manipulated. The author develops a representation for SRPs in which declarative statements for goals, perceptions, and beliefs make the structure and purpose of SRPs explicit and thereby simplify and speed up reasoning about SRPs and their projections; furthermore a notation is introduced allowing for transforming and manipulating SRPs. Using this notation, a planning system can diagnose and forestall common flaws in robot plans that cannot be dealt with in other planning representations. Finally the language for writing SRPs is extended into a high-level language that can handle both planning and execution actions.Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence ;1772Artificial intelligenceComputer communication systemsComputer logicArtificial Intelligencehttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/I21000Computer Communication Networkshttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/I13022Logics and Meanings of Programshttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/I1603XArtificial intelligence.Computer communication systems.Computer logic.Artificial Intelligence.Computer Communication Networks.Logics and Meanings of Programs.629.8/92Beetz Michaelauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut542874BOOK996465624203316Concurrent Reactive Plans2294854UNISA04600 am 2200721 n 450 991041801440332120190418979-1-03-654433-010.4000/books.ifp.2807(CKB)4100000011325883(FrMaCLE)OB-ifp-2807(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/42122(PPN)24849886X(EXLCZ)99410000001132588320200630j|||||||| ||| 0enguu||||||m||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierBilingual discourse and cross-cultural fertilisation: Sanskrit and Tamil in medieval India /Whitney Cox, Vincenzo VergianiPondichéry Institut Français de Pondichéry20191 online resource (476 p.) 81-8470-194-2 Cet ouvrage d’essais se propose de reconstruire les échanges, les réactions, les affinités et les ruptures qui se sont produits entre les univers culturels sanskrit et tamoul au cours de la période médiévale. Les intellectuels qui créèrent les oeuvres au sein de ces deux univers circulaient aisément entre ces domaines que l’indianisme a souvent eu tendance à compartimenter. Les onze contributions qui composent ce volume tentent de dépasser cette perspective trop étroite, valorisant ainsi la richesse et la complexité de la synthèse culturelle qui prit forme dans l’Inde du Sud à cette époque. Grâce à l’examen attentif de l’articulation des identités, des pratiques et des savoirs dans des textes de genres divers composés en tamoul ou en sanskrit (autant qu’en prakrit et en malayalam), ces essais offrent un tableau unique de par sa profondeur historique et sa complexité conceptuelle de l’Inde du Sud au moyen âge et, tout en utilisant des démarches novatrices dans la façon d’étudier et d’interroger les phénomènes transculturels, rendent compte de l’énorme quantité de travail qui reste à faire dans ce domaine. This collection of essays aims to trace the exchanges, responses, affinities and fissures between the worlds of Sanskrit and Tamil literary cultures in the medieval period. The literati who produced the works in these languages moved freely between domains that earlier Indological scholarship has tended to compartmentalise. The eleven studies presented in this volume strive to move beyond this narrow perspective and thus do justice to the richness and complexity of the cultural synthesis that took shape in South India in this period. By looking at the articulation of identities, practices, and discourses in texts of a range of genres composed in Tamil and Sanskrit (as well as Prakrit and Malayalam), these essays supply a picture of South India in the medieval period that is unique in its historical depth and conceptual complexity and demonstrate innovative ways to…Bilingual discourse and cross-cultural fertilisationDiscourse analysis, LiteraryIndiaSanskritDiscourse analysisTamilDiscourse analysisComparative literatureTamil and SanskritComparative literatureSanskrit and Tamilcultural historymedieval periodintellectual historyTamilSanskrittransculturationDiscourse analysis, LiterarySanskritDiscourse analysis.TamilDiscourse analysis.Comparative literatureTamil and Sanskrit.Comparative literatureSanskrit and Tamil.Chevillard Jean-Luc1297187Cox Whitney973406Francis Emmanuel712880Freeman Rich1318603Goodall Dominic649936Lubin Timothy1318604Orr Leslie C765733Schmid Charlotte1242892Takahashi Takanobu1297203Tieken Herman765743Vergiani Vincenzo1318605wilden Eva766242Cox Whitney973406Vergiani Vincenzo1318605École française d'Extrême-Orient.Institut français de Pondichéry.FR-FrMaCLEBOOK9910418014403321Bilingual discourse and cross-cultural fertilisation: Sanskrit and Tamil in medieval India3033456UNINA01774nam 2200493I 450 991070794170332120170208094357.0(CKB)5470000002469153(OCoLC)971616327(EXLCZ)99547000000246915320170208j201612 ua 0engurcn|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierActive vibration reduction of the Advanced Stirling Convertor /Scott D. Wilson, Jonathan F. Metscher, and Nicholas A. SchiferCleveland, Ohio :National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Glenn Research Center,December 2016.1 online resource (11 pages) color illustrationsNASA/TM ;2016-219416"December 2016.""Prepared for the 14th International Energy Conversion Engineering Conference (IECEC) sponsored by AIAA, Salt Lake City, Utah, July 25-27, 2016.""AIAA-2016-5015."Includes bibliographical references (page 11).BalancingnasatFault tolerancenasatNuclear fuelsnasatSpace missionsnasatStirling cyclenasatBalancing.Fault tolerance.Nuclear fuels.Space missions.Stirling cycle.Wilson Scott D(Scott Dean),1386881Metscher Jonathan F.Schifer Nicholas A.NASA Glenn Research Center,GPOGPOBOOK9910707941703321Active vibration reduction of the Advanced Stirling Convertor3532251UNINA