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Instructor Solution Manual for Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach,4th Edition, US Edition |2020, Stuart J Russell; Peter Norvig

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Instructor Solution Manual for Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach,4th Edition, US Edition |2020, Stuart J Russell; Peter Norvig












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, Instructor’s Solution Manual
Artificial Intelligence
A Modern Approach
Fourth Edition

Stuart J. Russell and Peter Norvig

with contributions from
Nalin Chhibber, Ernest Davis, Nicholas J. Hay, Jared Moore, Alex Rudnick,
Mehran Sahami, Xiaocheng Mesut Yang, and Albert Yu


This solution manual is intended for the instructor of a class. Students should use the online
site for exercises at aimacode.github.io/aima-exercises. That site is open for
anyone to use. It offers solutions for some but not all of the exercises; an instructor can check
there to see which ones have solutions. The exercises are online rather than in the textbook
itself because (a) the textbook is long enough as is, and (b) we wanted to be able to update
the exercises frequently.




Copyright © 2022


© 2023 Pearson Education, Hoboken, NJ. All rights reserved.

,EXERCISES 1
INTRODUCTION
Note that for many of the questions in this chapter, we give references where answers can be
found rather than writing them out—the full answers would be far too long.

1.1 What Is AI?

Exercise 1.1.#DEFA
Define in your own words: (a) intelligence, (b) artificial intelligence, (c) agent, (d) ra-
tionality, (e) logical reasoning.


a. Dictionary definitions of intelligence talk about “the capacity to acquire and apply
knowledge” or “the faculty of thought and reason” or “the ability to comprehend and
profit from experience.” These are all reasonable answers, but if we want something
quantifiable we would use something like “the ability to act successfully across a wide
range of objectives in complex environments.”
b. We define artificial intelligence as the study and construction of agent programs that
perform well in a given class of environments, for a given agent architecture; they do
the right thing. An important part of that is dealing with the uncertainty of what the
current state is, what the outcome of possible actions might be, and what is it that we
really desire.
c. We define an agent as an entity that takes action in response to percepts from an envi-
ronment.
d. We define rationality as the property of a system which does the “right thing” given
what it knows. See Section 2.2 for a more complete discussion. The basic concept is
perfect rationality; Section ?? describes the impossibility of achieving perfect rational-
ity and proposes an alternative definition.
e. We define logical reasoning as the a process of deriving new sentences from old, such
that the new sentences are necessarily true if the old ones are true. (Notice that does not
refer to any specific syntax or formal language, but it does require a well-defined notion
of truth.)


Exercise 1.1.#TURI
Read Turing’s original paper on AI (Turing, 1950). In the paper, he discusses several
objections to his proposed enterprise and his test for intelligence. Which objections still carry


© 2023 Pearson Education, Hoboken, NJ. All rights reserved.

, Section 1.1 What Is AI? 3



weight? Are his refutations valid? Can you think of new objections arising from develop-
ments since he wrote the paper? In the paper, he predicts that, by the year 2000, a computer
will have a 30% chance of passing a five-minute Turing Test with an unskilled interrogator.
What chance do you think a computer would have today? In another 25 years?


See the solution for exercise 26.1 for some discussion of potential objections.
The probability of fooling an interrogator depends on just how unskilled the interrogator
is. A few entrants in the Loebner prize competitions have fooled judges, although if you
look at the transcripts, it looks like the judges were having fun rather than taking their job
seriously. There certainly have been examples of a chatbot or other online agent fooling
humans. For example, see the description of the Julia chatbot at www.lazytd.com/lti/
julia/. We’d say the chance today is something like 10%, with the variation depending
more on the skill of the interrogator rather than the program. In 25 years, we expect that
the entertainment industry (movies, video games, commercials) will have made sufficient
investments in artificial actors to create very credible impersonators.
Note that governments and international organizations are seriously considering rules that
require AI systems to be identified as such. In California, it is already illegal for machines to
impersonate humans in certain circumstances.


Exercise 1.1.#REFL
Are reflex actions (such as flinching from a hot stove) rational? Are they intelligent?


Yes, they are rational, because slower, deliberative actions would tend to result in more
damage to the hand. If “intelligent” means “applying knowledge” or “using thought and
reasoning” then it does not require intelligence to make a reflex action.


Exercise 1.1.#SYAI
To what extent are the following computer systems instances of artificial intelligence:
• Supermarket bar code scanners.
• Web search engines.
• Voice-activated telephone menus.
• Spelling and grammar correction features in word processing programs.
• Internet routing algorithms that respond dynamically to the state of the network.


• Although bar code scanning is in a sense computer vision, these are not AI systems.
The problem of reading a bar code is an extremely limited and artificial form of visual
interpretation, and it has been carefully designed to be as simple as possible, given the
hardware.
• In many respects. The problem of determining the relevance of a web page to a query
is a problem in natural language understanding, and the techniques are related to those
© 2023 Pearson Education, Hoboken, NJ. All rights reserved.

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