I’m also not a lisp speaker, but I have a passing knowledge of ocaml syntax so I might have a look at lambda circle and blog on it. Once I figure out how to google for it.
Including lambda circle(? it is symbolic) which is associated with Sebastian Thrun and some real world robotics. An ocaml variant.
I was reminded of Sebastian Thrun’s CES that I heard about when reading EY’s Selling Non-Apples. Anyone know the differences between them?
I was really interested in CES when I read about it because of the idea of being able to seamlessly combine multiple sources of information about the same phenomenon, which is what you would need for a real-world agent that can perform general reasoning.
(I was especially interested when I saw scene in The Dark Knight where they convert the sonar data from a bunch of cell phones into an image of a city, and got to thinking about how you implement something like that, to the extent that it’s realistic, but please don’t hold that against me … )
It looks like there a number of other probabilistic languages out there.
Including lambda circle(? it is symbolic) which is associated with Sebastian Thrun and some real world robotics. An ocaml variant.
There is also another ocaml variant called Ibal, which doesn’t seem to use the sampling method the other two are talking about.
LtU has some discussion on them.
I’m also not a lisp speaker, but I have a passing knowledge of ocaml syntax so I might have a look at lambda circle and blog on it. Once I figure out how to google for it.
I was reminded of Sebastian Thrun’s CES that I heard about when reading EY’s Selling Non-Apples. Anyone know the differences between them?
I was really interested in CES when I read about it because of the idea of being able to seamlessly combine multiple sources of information about the same phenomenon, which is what you would need for a real-world agent that can perform general reasoning.
(I was especially interested when I saw scene in The Dark Knight where they convert the sonar data from a bunch of cell phones into an image of a city, and got to thinking about how you implement something like that, to the extent that it’s realistic, but please don’t hold that against me … )